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                  <text>Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Rescue workers left in dark
by poorly marked addresses
DEAR ABBY: I am a
police officer in a small but
very busy community in New
England. I would like to
impress upon your readers the
imponance of having their
address numbers clearly visible on their homes and businesses. On too many occasions, pol ice, fire and rescue
personnel have wasted pre·
cious time trying to find the
exact location of an emer-.
gency because the homes and
businesses in the area were
poorly marked - or not
marked at all. This could
mean the difference between
life or death for the persons
requiring assistance.
The numbers must be large
enough to be seen from the
roadway in all types of weather and lighting conditions.
Their color must contrast
sharply with their background. Put them directly on
or immediately by .the front
door. If the structure-is set too
far back from the road, place
the number at the entrance to
the driveway. Make them
large enough to be read from a
moving vehicle. Individual
apanment or condo doors
should be clearly numbered or
lettered as well. It is a wise
in vestment that could save
your life. - PUBLIC SE.R·
VANT IN RHODE ISLAND

I

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
DEAR PUBLIC SERVANT: You have written an
importa1it letter, and I'm
pleased lo pass along your
message. Address numbers
should be posted on both
sides of one's mailbox, or
near a porch light so they 're
clearly visible at night. Do not
allow hanging plants, overgrown shrubs or partially
opened doors to obscure
them.
Once 9-1-1 is called, if at all
possible. station someone at
the door or in the yard to
guide the police, firefighters
or emergency medical personnel in. It's also a good idea to
give the 9-1-1 operator a brief
description of the house. A
IS -minute search for an
address during an emergency
can be the difference between
life and death.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 20something new mother, as are
most of my friends. On New

Year's Eve, my husband and I WATER, FLA.
DEAR HEARTSICK:" By
invited all our friends who
have small children over to notifying your guests about
ring in the new year iogether. the unfonunate incident, you
The idea was that the children have already done the respon(all 20 months and younger) sible thing. You have preventcould play and fall asleep, ed it from happening again.
while the adults sal back and
Dear Abby is written by
enjoyed themselves.
Abigail Van Buren, also
The nursery was packed . known as Jeanne Phillips, and
with little ones snug m their was founded by her mother.
makeshift beds, as their moms Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
and dads sang "Auld Lang Abby at www.DearAbby.com
Syne." A good time was had or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
by all.
Angeles, CA 90069.
The next day, I received a
phone call from my cousin,
who attended the party. He's a
police officer. He told me that
two of my guests liad reported
$50 stolen from their purses
sometime during the evening.
I was flabbergasted. All of the
guests who attended are so
close that my husband and I
would have trusted them with
our children's lives. Now we
don 't know what to do. I've
called each guest. No one else
had money stolen, and any
one of us would have gladly
lent funds to whoever took the
cash from those purses.
What do I do now, Abby? I
have lost trust in my closest
friends. I had scheduled play
dates for our children, but
have told the other mothers
not to bring their purses. HEARTSICK IN CLEAR·

Pidure yourself
in a new career.
Find it in the
Classifieds!

Answer to Prevloua Puul•

Intended
41 Writing
1 Necessities
!lui&lt;!
6 Like a lot 42 Equine
(2 wds.)
fodder
11 type of
46 Wolltooth
computer 48 Long-eared
12 Suave
animal
13 Power
49 D'upllcity
14 Fruit cake 52 Wane
Ingredient 53 Delphi's
15 Baseball
god
teams
54 Feel at
ACROSS

16 11 M•A•s•H"

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

home

actor
55 Campus
17 Mock
buildings
fanfare
56 Buy
18 Gulf st.
DOWN
19 Inventor
-Sikorsky
23 Postal
1 Craze
delivery
2 Over1urn
25 Yep's
3 Place to
opposite
fish
26 Excavate
4 clothing
29 Act cranky 5 Watch
32 Absorbed,
secretly
as costs
6 Network
33 Very long
7 Get hold of
time
8 Not close
34 Creepy
9 Lennon's
35 Impatient
wile
chuck
10 Stimpy's
36 Ear cleaner
canoon pal
38 --lor the 11 Advanced,
money
as cash
40 Petruchlo's 12 Pac-10

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 120

with them from time to time
and share what's going on.

Bv BERNICE BEDE Dsot

In !he year ahead a change
in cin.:umstanccs: will allow a
testy suc itli situation in your

life to resolve i1&gt;elf in an extremely favnrable way. You" II
come out of it ha ving better

relation ships with all in volved.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - If there is a friend who
can't come to you but with
whom yo u' d like to share
your time today. make arrangemems to go to him or
her. It' ll turn out to be more
fun thnnvou expect.

PISCES (Pcb. 20-March
20) - A way may be found
today to acquire something
material that you didn't think
you could afford. Keep your
eyes &lt;&gt;pen for a sale or someone who is se lling the item

second hand.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - A project that is important to you is also important to others. so don' t leave
them out of the loop. It' s OK
to work alone on it. but check
f&gt;.C\1..1~\..L\ ,1
~t\\o\1

'

TAURUS (April '20-May
20) - Condit.ions are extremely promising today for
using your talents. know-how
and past experiences to help
your life right now. Rely on
the pas! to brighten your future.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- Should you see that a valued friend of yours could use
some support today. speak up
on his or her behalF in front of
others so that everyone knows
where your loyalties lie .
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - Be explicit concerning
your ~oals or ambitions today
and cfon't let your focus' drift
off onto something else. Assertiveness coupled with determination pays large divi dends.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're more than up to handling challenging situations
today . This includes involvements in sports. your social
life, affairs of the heart or the
commercial world.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

J\.lfi1

-. Even though you may at .
first have doubts about a
chanf!e instituted by

out~ide

influences today. conditions
will work out to your ultimate
benefit in the long run . Hang
in there.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23)
- Should companions have

County budget
woes cited
as reason

"and be~inning April I, my
office will be forced to close
one day a week- Friday."
"This closing will not only
reduce service to the public
and taxpayers, but will reduce
the total salaries of my
· BY BRIAN J. REED
employees
by $611.22 per
Staff writer
semi-weekly pay period, a
reduction of $12,224.40 per
POMEROY
MeigS&gt; year," he added. "This is the
County Treasurer Howard total amount needed to bal·
Frank hopes reduced· office ance my budget."
hours will alleviate a shonfall
Frank's operating budget
in his operating budget.
. has been reduced from
Faced with a 15 percent cut $103,688.14 in 2002 to
in his office appropriation, $88,124.94 for 2003.
Frank announced Wednesday
"This budget is less than
his plans to reduce his office that for 1986," Frank said.
hours to a four-day week.
"That year, we had 15,000
"Budget constraints iQJhe par~els of land to work with
general fund have created~ 95 investment accounts.
serious problem for county Today, we have 25,000
government," Frank said, parcels and 180 accounts."

suggest ions for today"s activi-

ties that oppose your desires.
go along w1th the will of the
group. All will work out well
for you if you let the majority
rule.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - When there are material rewards at stake, your ambitions will be easily aroused
and come into play. Let your

to produce today.

WORD®©®CD@@@@®·
0000000

ment s might have to be man-

aged with a delicate hand and
much consideration today.
It'll be worth it, because everyone involved wi ll appreciate the way you handle thmgs.
CAI'RICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - It looks like you ·
could be in for a pleasant surprise ioday in relation to a
situation about which you had
great skepticism. The out·
come w1ll be better than you
had hoped it would.

0000000

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0
9.2~¥.9.¥.
@@@@®@®

....

JUDD'S TOTAL

0

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3roLeneoTotal

~'be ~Iigible to~
IS

~~~~~gg !'~~~1;otol 0
.

. previous
Word
Scrim·
AVERAGE GAME 115-125

from the Rocksprings Rehab from Dan's in Middlepon; a $20
gift certificate and a wax
Center; a heart pendant on a ·
dipped
bear
POMEROY - One lucky chain _
f r o m
shopper at a Meigs County bus!·
Hearts
ness will be the winner of a
Valentine's Day basket to
remember.
.
The basket is filled with
gifts and gift certij~~
worth more than
All anyone has to

2nd DOWN

+JPo1n1s

AVERAGE GAME 160-170

FOURPLAYTOTAL =
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS : Make a 2- to 7-letteJ word !rom the leiters on aactl yatdllne.

by JUDD HAMBRICK

Add !)oirts to aadt word or Iutter using scoring directions at rtght. Seven-le!Jer
words get a 6C&gt;-polnt bonus. AM words can be found 1n WebSter's New workS
College Oictionary.
JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

mag~

,_..,

II 20D31Jr!Rid FA!ure Syndlcall,lnr: .

5:*11( \:bzP 1'2&gt; 1301.11-\&lt;;l To CPIJ£

'd:JMt. l1 ME

A\P\-\6, i&gt;-\-\0

~lOt\£

1.3'U~t&gt;T 1\\/il

13\.\\313\.E !

(l fJUN~

IJALHlilNE!)

DON'T

ONE
I PLAN
10 E·~•AIL

CO~NT .

=

('I'M (riRL·
FRI~NO
IS ~ER~

THt"''RE
TOO

....

TO SE "PER50NAL; OTMtR
PEOPt..E HAIJE TO WATC.H
~0~ 5HOP .. . A&amp;OOJ!~E ... 6ET
t"5EtURE... f&gt;HOP ;om[
MORE ... OT"ER,.,15E, WHAT
&gt;i/li/E ~OU R•~ED ?" WHitT

PE~50NAL.

IMP!:ROONAL

ON
M~.

womEIII

FUN~TIOI\I

•s A &amp;ROUP.

PIEtE Oi' ~OUR HEAtrr
HA~E 'IOU GIVE!~ U~ '??

·

~

The basket contains a candle Middlepon; a $25 gift certificate gift cenificate from Judy

News editor

0

@@@@@@@ ·

to

47
-183

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

'"DOWN

Answer

..

with the loss in revenue from
sales tax, local government
and local government assistance funds, personal property
tax and inter-county personal
propeny tax," he added. "All
the reductions of these funds
contributed to the shortfall in
the general fund. "
"After all this loss, the budget commission cannot cenify
ll)ore money than is available
to operate county government," Frank said. "Only the
amount cenified to the county
commissioners can be appropriated for government operations."
"This budget commission
will never cenify more money
than the estimated receipts,
and the county will always
have a year-end balance, as is
required by law," he added.

Sentinel, merc·ha·nts launch
Sweetheart Basket giveaway

desires for ~ain provide the
type or motivation you need

41h DOWN

Frank said his staff of four
full-time deputies have not
received a pay raise for three
years.
"I run my office on a slim
budget anyway, and this is
difficult for my employees,
but they have agreed it must
be done," Frank said, noting
the cost of insurance for
employees is a single policy
plan at $21.74 every two
weeks, and $145.57 for afamily plan.
"Office receipts from tax
collections is $108,000 per
year," Frank said. "Receipls
paid into the general fund
from the investment of public
funds in 2002 were $250,000,
while interest this year will be
$160,000, a reduction of
$90,000.
"This reduction combines

'Be my valentine'

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) - Social involve-

www.mydailysentinel.com

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2003

Treasurer's ·office hours cut No.dentist, no

to
39 Muss
41 Division
word
43 Firebug's
crime
44 Drift
45 Melody
47 Ia not well
48 Electronic
reminder
49 Not a dlt
50 Envlr.
monitor
51 Mountain
pass
52 FedEx
units

team
Enticing
18 Passion
20 Kind of
cheese
21 Casts a
vote
22 Terrible
smell
24 Mellow
26 Student's
need
27 Sioux City
site
28 Tiny Insect
30 Luxury
fur
31 Architect
I.M.37 Happened
16

Astrograph

Thursday. Feb. 6. 2003

Prep basketball roundup, Bl

Wednesday, February 5, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

to 81811 up at OllC

of ihe Participating local businesses.
The Daily
Sentinel and 25
local
merchants have
joined together
for
a
"Sweetheart
Basket" giveaway. The quality twig basket of
gifts will be
awarded to an
entry drawti on Feb.
14.
The winner will be
contacted by The
Sentinel to schedule a promotional photo which will
be taken at the business which
appears on the winning entry.
The rules specify that those
registering must be at least 18
and that tileir name, phone num·
ber and name of business must
appear on each entry fonn. No
purchase is necessary to participate.
The deadline for entering the
contest is Feb. I 2..

'

Gifts valued at more than $600 fill this valentine's Day
•Sweetheart Basket" to be awarded to some local shopper
whose name Is drawn on Feb. 14. (Charlene Hoeflich)
from

in Aglow in Middlepon; a $20

Acquisitions

Kay's in Middlepon; l $20 gift
cenificate from McClure's
Restaurants in Pomeroy and
Middlepon;
Clark's Jewelry Store of
Pomeroy, earrings; Precious
Memories of Middlepon, a
$30 gift cenificate; Pomeroy
Flower Shop, a $20 gift cer, tificate; K&amp;C Jewelry, a
'garnet and pearl pendant;
Weaving Sti!_ehes, hand
and body ~ons and
soap; Francis Florist
of Pomeroy, a fresh
cut floral arrangement;
Anderson's of
Pomeroy, a Cats
Meow of the
Pomeroy Bridge;
Hartwell House, a
twig basket; Fabric
Shop of Pomeroy,
place mats a:nd napkins; Hearth and
Candlelight
of
Middlepon, a candle;
Riverside
Golf
Course, a $20 gift certificate; Ingels Jewelry
of Middleport, a jewelry
box;
The Ohio River Bear Co. of
Middlepon, a bear; the
Middlepon Department Store,
an Ohio State flag; the Shoe
Place/Locker
219
of
Middlepon, a $20 gift certificate; Swisher and Lohse of
Pomeroy, a box of candy; the
Court Street Grill, a $25 gift
cenificate; .the Dairy Queen of
Middlepon, an ice cream cake;
ahd Crow's of Pomeroy, dinner for two.

service: Local
clinic closed
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

News editor
POMEROY - "We've
got the money, got the
equipment, got the building,
got the ancillary people, but
can't find a dentist."
That was Meigs County
Health
Commissioner
Norma Torres ' explanalion
about why the Appalachian
Dental Chnic is closed.
"We've tried every way to ·
keep it open," she said, "but
without a dentist, what can
you do?"
Torres said that the search
for an Ohio cenified dentist
has been extensive.
"We've
looked,
the
Governor's
Office
of
Appalachia and Joy Padgett
have been lookiQg, and
we've solicited help from
the Ohio State Umversity
School of Dentistry."
"It seems there's a national shonage of dentists, and
that's a real problem for us
right now ·when· we have
· hundreds of low-income,
underinsured and uninsured
people who need dental
care," she added.
After the county received
a $200,000 grant for dental
care from the Appalachian
Regional Corrurussion, the
clinic opened in the fall of
2001 in the Pickens property
on
.South
Third
in

t',.J

Index
.

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I

WALTER HAGEN
SAID TUAT AS WE
rFl
60 T~ROV6H LIFE.
Eo"
WE
S~OVLD TAKE
j;;;l'
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SMELL 1~E R05iE5ju

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·Police physicals catch village short
BY

J. Mn.a

LAYTON

A3 . Staff writer
84-S
Classifieds
POMEROY - When a
86
Comics
fresh
recruit applies to
86
Dear Abby
become a yolice officer, the
A4
Editorials
AS
Movies
Village o fomeroy pays
for a physical to ensure that
Obituaries
AS
it has the best and most fit
Sports
81·2
people for service.
Weather
A2 .
This type of physical
C 2003 Ohio Volt.,. Publishi"' Co.
does not cost a mere $50

Down on the Farm

Pollc.. AS

M listed posiHons '*!Uire an Ohio Ucense, or Ohio License eligibility.

Excellent salary/benefit package

;z

=
0
...

BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

Staff writer
POMEROY - Village
council took a step forward
in eliminating burned out
buildings and homes in
Pomeroy at Wednesday
night's meeling.
Currently, if propeny is
damaged or destroyed, the
owner is reimbursed for 95
percent of the property's
value if that person has
insurance. The insurance
company disburses the
remaining 5 percent to the
village.
If the property owner
repairs or demolishes his
propeny, the owner can then
collect the additional 5 per·
cent which the village
retained .from the initial
insurance settlement.
In a perfect world, proper·
ty owners would repair or
demolish their propeny, but
in some cases owners decide
that it is not wonh repairing
the propeny. There are a
number of instances where
propeny owners take their
initial 95 percent cut of the
insurance settlement and
head off to greener pastures

leaving the village stuck
with the problem of demolishing burned out structures.
Council member VictoF
Young lii estimates there
are 15 lo 20 burned out
structures that owners have
left behind for the village 'to
deal with.
· According to Mayor John
Blaettnar, 5 percent does not
cover the costs of demolition. To make matters even
worse, many insurance companies have not disbursed
the 5 percent retain age to the
village. .
Young said this is against
the law and would stop. He
said the village should look
into legal measures against
insurance companies who
do not obey the law and
claim ignorance of it.
The taxpayers have to
pick up the slack to eliminate the unsightly struclpres
if the property owners can-.
not be located. Costs for
demolition work can run
· several thousand dollars,'
depending on lhe size of the
job.
Council is in the process
of enacting an ordinance
Ple•se see Fire, AS

MEDICAL. CE.NTER

Discover theHolzer Difference

www.holzer.org

II inlerested, pleo5e conloct Kenny Coughenour at

446-5205

et::l

-

Ple•n -

Plene see Clinic. AS .

Repair or raze:
That is the question

CeaiiRell Occupullanulftaea 11 t AaiJtucal · Fuii·Time

~

0
....

f -t _

a number of applicants who
take the physical and get
hired, then leave for whatever reason a short time
later for another village or
city nearby.
Mayor John Blaettnar
said there have been at
least six or seven instances
when new hires leave. One
new hire left after working

Dr. . erben Rollins, a
retired Columbus dentist,was hired at $80,000 a year
plus benefits, new equipment was purchased, a denIal lab was installed and outside renovations to make the

Immediate Job Openings
X·Ray •chltllcl• - Full-Time
Plaplctll 'lheraplat- Full-Time
Plaplcal'lheaupy AuiJtaaal ·Full-Time

!T I::t 1 f-lOW OIOYOU KNQW7

rFl

for a routine check like one
would give a high school
athlete, but is instead very
in-depth.
According Kathy Hysell,
clerk-treasurer, a physical
costs $1 ,000 or more per
applicant . This is money
the village is willin" to pay
"'
if the applicant is hued and
serves the village for a long
time .
The problem arises when

Middle~on.

building
handicapped
accessible
were completed. .
Fro .m
the tim,e
the clinic
opened in
::-...:.......-• I a t e
Torrea
August to
the end of
the year, 914 clients had
been seen, a clear indicatio'n
of the need .
Rollins left in May 2002,
the facility was closed .in
June because of the lack of a
dentist, and it was open
from
·July
thro1,1g~
September two days a week
with two part-time dentists.
Another dentist came in
afterward and was there
until he left in early
December. The clinic has
been closed since then.
During the months the
clinic operated, I ,461 visits
were made for dental work.
The clients were, according
to Torres, 52 percent low
income, 46 percent with a
Medicaid card, and 2 per·
cent with insurance.
"We've been beating the
bushes every since Dr.
Rollins left," said Torres,
who noted that the search
continues because funding
is intact until May 31.
In anticipation of locating
a dentist, the health commissioner said the · county has
applied fqr an addition
$200,000 ARC grant to con·
tinue the program.
"We've got everything in

_.__.=

.,

••

•·

,.

�PageA2

•Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather

Thursday, February 6, 2003

Court news

Friday, Feb. 7

Meigs County
Court cases
resolved

shoot at deer, facsimile from $30 and costs; George E.
roadway, $100 and costs, no Flint, Holden, W.Va., speeddeer permit, $25 and costs, ing, $30 and costs; Carroll J.
loaded fuearm in a motor Johnson, Portland, speeding,
vehicle, $100 and costs, 10 $30 and costs; Tracy M.
POMEROY _ Numerous days jail suspended, one year Montgomery, Columbus, no
I Monoflold l1e·!ao' I •
probation, complete hunter seatbelt, $20 and costs;
INO. i
cases have been resolved in safety course; Kevin R. Robert
W.
Miller,
•••••
the court of Meigs County Meadows, Rutland; shoot at Huntington, W.Va., speed·
• ••••
•••••
Judge Steve Story.
a deer facsimile from a road- ing, $30 and costs; Erica D.
They include Daniel E. way, $100 and costs, no Byler, Jackson, speeding,
. 1co1...11ua lzao121• I
Swisher, Cheshire, marked hunting license, $25 and $26 and costs; John A.
lanes, costs only; Kelley R. costs, shoot from a motor McGraw, Baltimore, speedLawson, Racine, seatbelt, vehicle, $100 and costs, 10 ing, $30 and costs; Adrian
$30 and costs; Paul W. days jail suspended, one year W. Monesi, Columbus, no
••••
•
Lewis, Jr., Racine, speed, probation, complete hunter seatbelt, $30 and costs;
$24 and costs; William J. safety course, no deer per- Margaret E. Boatri.,ht,
••••
· $25 an d costs.
·swansboro, N.c ., speed"'mg,
Gothard, II, Chespeake, mtt,
•
d
$4
1
d
H
I
spee •
an costs; aze
Dwight S. Haley, Rutland, $30 and costs; Jeremy C.
Gibson
Life,
Reedsville,
no
hunting license, $25 and Williams, Gallipolis, speed*
KY.
speed,
$22
and
costs;
Mark
costs,
orte year probation, no ing, $30 and costs.
0 2003 AocuWNihef,
S. Lawson, Shade, posses- deer permtt, $25 and costs;
Lena R. Yoacham,
sion, $50 and costs, possess Lawrence Cundiff, Racine, Racine, speeding, $30 and
drug paraphenalia, $50 and illegal transport of a loaded costs; Cathy L. Cutshaw,
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Showell T..tomw
R11n
FllniR
Snow
!c.
costs.
.
firearm, $100 suspended to Fleming, speedin~, $30
Samuel W. Stout, $50 and costs; Joshua A. and costs; Demse R.
Pomeroy, underage con- Starcher, Pomeroy, reckless Swartz, Grove City, speedsumption, $100 susvended, operation, forfeiture, costs, ing, $30 and costs; Donald
costs, three days
. in Jail. sus- spee d• $100 suspended, Jou ds, W'l
1 son, N.C .,
1
21
d
d
b
pen
e
•
pro
auon
unu
;
costs,
seatbelt,
$30
and
speeding,
$30
and costs;
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
tions.
Mary
Shoemaker,
Cheshire,
costs;
Kevin
Roush,
Racine,
Christina
Martin,
Point
· More snow is on the way
Weather forecast:
failure
to
control,
$25
and
p
·
f
d
$100
PI
w"
ossessmn o rugs,
easant, . va., seat bel t,
..
.
.
Tonight... Snow. Total accufor the area today through fnfi
costs; ICtltlous regtstratlon, and costs, six months jail $30 and costs; Charles
mulation, I to 2 inches. Lows
day morning.
$25
and costs; Jameson H. suspended, one year proba- Workman, Jr., Nelsonville,
A departing high pressure in the mid 20s. Light and varispeeding, $30 and costs;
Johnson,
Langville, reckless tion.
system early today paved the able winds. Chance of snow
operation $50 and costs,
Michael A~rsl, Rutland, Carl W. Hendershot, II,
way for an approaching cold near I00 percent.
assured
clear
distance
ahead,
1
f
f center, 5 an d costs; '"-'k
to
''"' er, w"
. va., speed'mg,
e
front to bring in snow and
Friday...Mostly cloudy with
$25
h
K
d
I
an
costs;
osep
·
Patricia
A.
Miller,
Coolville,
$30
and
costs;
Wilma J.
more cold weather. A surge of a chance of snow showers.
Bova, Guysville, speed, $25 reckless operation, $100 and Beegle, Mount Alto,
moisture ahead of the front Highs near 30. Northwest
and costs. . h II p
costs, 2 years probation, W.Va., speeding, $30 and
will be drawn northward winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
W
J
h
II
ere
•
omeroy,
.
Bfian Halley, Reedsville, costs; Aaron K. Daniels,
o
n
of
snow
40
pereent.
·
from Texas into the Ohio
failure
to control, $25 and Springfield, seatbelt, $30
attempted
breaking
and
Valley.
·
Friday
night...Mostly
entering,
$500
and
costs,
six
costs;
Jeffery
Karr, and costs;.
With the moisture in place cloudy with a slight chance of
Aaron R. Surface,
months in jail suspended to MiddleJ?ort, driving under
a low pressure system aloft snow showers until midnight,
15 days in jail, 50 days house suspens1on, $200 and costs, Marietta, speeding, $30
will track across central ohio. then mostly clear. Lows in the
arre~t, ~wo years prob~tio~, three days jai~ suspended, and costs; .Wilma Acord,
This system, along with the mid teens. Chance of snow 20
restitutiOn;
BenJamm one year probauon.
Hebron, speeding, $30 and
cold front, will provide percent.
Robert
J. Glass, costs; Jason Rose, New
Mitchell, Pomeroy, assault,
enough
instability
and
Extended forecast:
$500
and
costs,
45
days
in
M'ddl
ld
Saturday
...
Mostly
sunny.
·
.
b
.
1
eport,
rec
ess opera- Haven, w.v·a., spee d'mg,
dynamics ~o produce . about
1
1wo years pro allon, tion, $100 and costs, one $30 and costs; Bradley J.
Jal
•
oHe 10 two ruches .
Highs 35 to 39.
·
restitution; Trav1s Siders, year probation; Harold E. Wilford, Tuppers Plains,
Saturday
High temperatures will
night. .. Partly
Racine, trespass, $100 and Rose, Racine, no seatbelt, . speeding, $30 and costs;
reach the upper 20s and cloudy. Lows in the lower 20s.
costs, 30 days jail suspend- · $30 and costs; Latisha Mikel
K.
Young,
lower 30s today, but fall back
Sunday...Cioudy with a
ed,
one
year
probation.
Grueser,
Rutland,
speeding,
Longbottom,
speeding,
into the 20s after the frontal chance of snow showers.
Raymond R. Dailey,
passage for Friday. Hi~h Highs in the mid 30s.
Parkersburg,
DUI, $850 and
pres sure will provide a bnef
Monday... A chance of snow
costs, 10 days jail suspended r---------~-------...;.,-----,
dry period Fnday night and showers in the morning, otherto three, six month license
into Saturday, but then anoth- wise partly cloudy. Lows 20 to
·
suspension, one year probaer cold front will bring in 25 and highs in the mid 30s.
tion,
jail and $500 suspendArctic air and another period
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy
ed
upon
completion of RTP
of snow Saturday night and with a chance of snow showReader SerVices ·
(USPS 213-880)
school,
fililure
to control,
Sunday.
ers. Lows 20 to 25 and highs
Col'niCtlon
Polley
Ohio
Valley
Publlehlng Co.
costs only.
Highs early next week will in the mid 30s.
Our main concern In all atorlaa Ia to be Published
every
Kevin Jewell, Langville, aocurs1e. II you know o1 an error In a Monday through Fl'ldaV. afternoon,
only be in the lower and mid
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. ·
11 f Court
loaded fuearm in a motor story, call the nawaroom at (740) 992· Street, Pomeroy, OhiO. Second·
20s while lows will drop into Lows in the lower 20s and
vehicle, $100 plus costs; 10 21 156.
clasa poatage paid at Po""roy.
the single digits in some Ioca- highs in the mid 30s.
Member: The Auoclaild Pfeil
days jail suspended, one
and
tha
Ohio
Newapapar
Our
meln
numiMr
I•
year probation, obstructing
Alloclatlon.
(740)
eea-21
ee.
·
official business, $200 and
Poltmaater: Send addran cor·
Dlplirtmlnt ~XtM~•Ion• 1rr.
costs, one year probation,
raotiOne to The Dally Sentinel, 111
shooting from a motor vehiCourt Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
Ntwl
cle, SI00 and costs, one )'ear
45788.
Clla~•n• HoetiiOII, Ext. 12
. NEW YORK (AP) - The gallon Wednesday after·
probation: Mark A. Haley, ICIIIon
lleparllr: Irian And, EJCt. 14
lublorlptlon
Middleport, aid in shooilng III~Drlln J. MIIM ~
Dow Jones industrial aver- noon, Its highest level since
ly
01rrter or motor rolorll
•
a facsimile, $100 and costs,
age fell 28. II, or 0.4 per- May 2001.
Ont•nth
... . ........•••
10 days jail suspended, one .
cent, to close at 7,985.18,
Advtrtlelna
one
VII' •• , ••••••••••111.40 ·
The price of crude has
year probailon, no hunilna Ou1iltlt ..... 1 0.'111 Hirrli, Ext. 15 DIIIW' • • •
.10'
having declined 96 points In been above $30 a barrel
Cltii./Ciro.: Judy Clark, EJCI. 10
license,
$25
and
costs,
no
Subecrlbtre ehould remit In
the previous session. Earlier since mid-December and . deer permit, $25 and costs.
advanca dlract to Tht Dally
in the day, blue-chip stocks closed at 533.93, up 35
Sentinel.
No eubaorlpllan by mall
• Adam Ruuell, Vinton,
Clrculltlon
permitted In 11111 whara home
rose as much as 139 points. cents,
on
Nymu
DIIIIIOI Mgr.: Mlkl Jtnldne, Ext. 17
oarrlar Hrvloa II IVIIIIblt.
The broader market also Wednesday.
General Manaa•r
finished modestly lower.
March heating oil gained
M•ll lub~arlptlon
Cha~ent Hoetlloh, En 12
The Nasdaq composite 3.21 cents to close at 99.40
13 w.'!'~~ ~~~~~.~~~~\o.1a
index declined 4.65, or 0.4 cents a gallon.
l·mill:
2e
weeki .............oeo.oo
naweOmydallyltntlntl.com
percent, to 1.301.50. The
On
London's
52 Weeki .. , .. , . , , , ..'118.80
Standard &amp; Pobr's 500 International
Petroleum .
Web:
...... Outllda Mllga County .
index dropped 4.61, or 0.5 Exchange, March Brent
www.mydiiii'Ontlnel.oorn
13
Wllkl , .. ....... ...'50.011
percent, to 843.59.
rose 27 cents to close at
26 Wllkl . . . ...... . ..'100.10
52 W11kl .. ..• .. .. • ..'200.20
The wholesale price of $31.36 a barrel. Natural gas
gasoline on the New York for March delivery rose
Mercantile Exchange rose 11 .8 cents to settle at
3.09 cents to $1.032 per $5.644 per 1,000 cubic feet.

-

:;·*I

.

• - ... -·

0 ~ --~.

... . .

•

•

• , ., • &gt;;•«

....

$30 and costs; Nellie
Whitehill, Columbus, speed,
$30 and costs.
Mary Rogus, Athens,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Dennis W. Connolly, Cutler,
seatbelt, $30 and costs;
David L. Miller, Millersburg,
speeding, $30 and costs;
K.
Matthews,
Daniel
Nohomis, Ill., speeding, $30
and costs; Chad M. Clark,
Racine, speeding, $30 and
costs; Timothy J. Myers,
Belmont, W.Va., No seatbelt,
$30 and costs; Wade L.
Denney. Lagersburg, no seale
belt, $30 and costs, Gail M.
Sevalzel, Charleston, speeding, $30 and costs.

LOOK
FOR·
.IT!!

The
2003

The Daily Sentinel

Dow falls 28.11 points

"m•

I • •

Taft
denies
clemency
request ·

Local Stocks
Federal Mogul -

.11

USB-20.50
Gannen- 71.51
.
General Electric -23

GKNLY-3.25
Harloy Davldaon- 40.91
Kmart- .11
Kroger- 14.47
Ltd. - 12.35
NSC-19.43
Qak HI flnanc!al- 24.32

OVB-22.30

BBT-32.83
Peoples - 24.57
Pepsico - 41 .08
Premier - 8 .08

Roc:kwell- 22.76
Rocky Boots- 5.45
RD Shell - 41.50

Seers- 25 .54
Wlll·Mart- 46.75
Wendy's- 26.02
Worthington - 14.42
Dally stOCk reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's t~ansactlons, provided by Smith Partners
at Adveat Inc. ol
Gallipolis.

State to close centers in
Springfield, Apple Creek
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
state will close developtrental tenters in western and northeast Ohio
to help fill a blrlget deficit
The Springview U!velq:J111Cidal
Center in S['ringfield will close by
mid-2005, and the Apple Oeek
L\!velopmental Center near
Wooster will close by June 30,
2006, said Kenneth Ritcrey, director of the Ohio D::palbtiCIII of
Mental
Retardation
and
L\!velqirooltal Disabilities.
Springview has 86 residents a00
179 Sla1f. Apple Creek houses 181
residents and employs 381.
The state houses 1,895 peqlle in

12centm.
Gov. BOO Thft earliec said that
bcx:anse of a $720 million lulget
slntfall, at k3t one pisoo and
one juvenile delentioo C8lla' also
liiiSt be cloiied. Last week, stale
)Xisoos ollicials said 1hey wru1d
close the lima Correctional
lmtitution.
Stac Sen. Steve Ausaia said the
age of the IE3dy 100-year-old
Spingfield &amp;enlet, ~ llllllber ci
residents, OOilding ~
that are 11el'Xkld and ~ amxmt of
rmney it takes to~ wae factors in the decision to close

s(XUigVIeW.
. .

•

COLUMBUS (AP)
Gov. Bob Taft refiMd to grant
clemency Wednesday for a
northwest Ohio man sentenred to die next week for
ki~ing, strangling and
stabbin~ a college student
after lunng her to a ~y job
interview 14 years ago.
Richard E. fux, 47, is to die
by injection Feb. 12. He has
no appeals pnting, and his
aaorneys said they will file no
more because there are no
legal issues that courts have
not already reviewed.
'There comes a time in the
case when all the stones have
been turned and there's nothing left to do in the comthouse.
That's the case of Mr. fux,"
said Greg Meyers, chief of the
Ohio Public I:lefen!B's death
penalty section and one of
Fox's attorneys.
"Now we have to help him
to die with as much dignity
and peace as possible."
The Ohio Parole Boanllast
month unanimously recommended against chan~g
fux's sentence to life in pnson
without the chaoce of parole. \
'There is no doubt that Mr. ·
fux is guilty of brutally mur&lt;bing 1.esfie Kl:clder," Thft
said in a statement "There are
no cin:umstances in this case
that would indicate any manifest injustice. I can lind no
compellinH re&lt;~Son to grnnt
clemency.'

·''

• • •

I

0 •

•

'

• '

•

Retirement

TIVERTON, R.I. (AP) - A
farm where almost 100 sheep
and goats recently were put to
death after several were found
neglected will be under quarantine for five years and the owner
may face criminal charges.
The animals had been quarantined since mid-November,
when.the state public health veterinarian cited their owner,
Margied Mohammed, for not
prope~ly documenting their
entry mto Rhode Island.
Inspectors found dozens of
animals to be malnourishe&lt;f and
some to be diseased.
Some sickly animals were
euthanized over the past month
and buried. The L\!partrnent of
Environmental · Management

..

\".

NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - : gy, but you wouldn't put a wind al waters and begun the appllca·
Proposals to build windmills off farm in Yosemite Park," said tion process for permission to
the Atlarttic coast are tnl:eting . Robert F. Kennedy Jr., son of build there. '
·
with resista~~ce from environ- the former U.S. attorney generThe company plans to add
mentalists who might be al and president of Waterkeeper more sites. Potential customers
expected to support an alterna- Alliance, a New York environ- include local utilities that could
tive, "clean" erti:rgy source.
mentalist group.
resell the power generated by
Offshore wind farms exist in
Dennis Quaranta, president the windmills, huge commerEurope but not,ill the United of Wirtergy LLC, based in cia! users, and state and local
States. A company planning Shirley, N.Y., said the critics are governments.
windmills off Virginia, New · suffering from a case of In VIrginia, Wmergy wants to
York, New Jersey, Maryland, NIMBY.
build a $900 million wind farm
Massachusetts and Delaware · "Everyone is a great environ- at Smith Island, near the mouth
says the farms woUld provide mentalist, until it's in their of the Chesapea]re Bay, in fed·
energy without emitting green- area." Quaranta said. 'Then it's eral waters three miles off the
house gases that pollute'the air. ' not in my back yanl, riot in my · coast. The site off VIrginia's
Env~~Ynmental and -wildlife · beach view, not in the ocean, Eastern Shore peninsula covers
gro~ps ;Jll¥ll~· ~owever, that the · not anywhere."
45 square miles with an average
projects· ~sent an offshore · That said, the company is water depth ofless than 60 feet.
lan.d grii!):o,f puJ:Ilic p_ropeity for willing to listen to and respond It was selected in part because
private use. 11)CY ·also-conler\d ' to objections, he said. Wmcigy of its wind speeds, proximity to
the fanns will n'iar the natW'al recently removed three of four major transmission Jines and
beauty of the coastline, interfere potential sites from its wind lack of marine mammal activi·
with fishing, din)inish pmperty farm plan for Virginia after ty.
values,:;; ~qrt recreation and learning that the Navy was conThe 271 turbines would
tourism, and may prove harm- cerned because military opera- either be placed atop platforms
ful to migratorybirds.
lions take place there.
or slipped over long poles that
They'd prefer that the wind- · "We do listen to what people would be driven into the bottom
mills be placed farther out than have to say," Quaranta said. of the Atlantic Ocean. The base
within a f~' illiles. of shore as "We don't try to buck the sys- of each windmill would be 220
proposed, ln places Where their tern.'' ·
to 280 feet, and the wingspan of
effects would me minimized.
ln all, Wmergy has identified the turbine blades would be
"I'm ~Jll!llitted.to windener- about 20 o1fshore sites in feder- about 330 feet tip to tip.

OaUtpoU•
Batlp Qtrtbune

•

t}oint tllea•ant
~egt•ter

The
Daily Sentinel

"

"It's a win-win situation,"
said Harold HarpSter, a professor of animal science at Penn
State University. "It takes this
food product out of the landfills and puts it into use feeding
these livestock."
In Hawaii, some .came get
the leftovers from .a pifleapple
processing plant. Kansas cattle
feast on sunflower seed hulls.
ln Nebraska and California,
they eat sugar beet plllp.
In Pennsylvania, ca~ food
is sometimeS even more like
people food. The Hershey's
plant provides chocolate, a

plant. The
cattle eat
I
5
pounds of
potato
peelings,
1

5

pounds of
c o r -n ,
e i g h t

pounds of Herr Angus Farrn
hay and manager ·Dennis
f 0 u r Byrne holds a'
pounds of party mix of pota-'
"steer
p a r 1 y to chips, pretzelp:
mix" _ and popcorn used.
c h i p s , as supplemental
popcorn, feed for h1s herd
pretzels of cattle. (AP) ·
a n d
cheese curls. It's all mixed·
together in a blender the size:
·
of a large van.

Lane

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Blood Pressure Screenings

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124 W. Main St reet , Pomeroy, OH 45769

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Credit

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The

B.E.S S

C~sh

You Need Nowl

CHILDBIRTH EDUCATION CLASSES

Do not eat or dri11k[or the 10 hours
prior to your scheduled screening
(except water). May take medication.

A box lunch will be provided to those
who attend the presentation.

from the Holzer Cardwvascular
,,

•
•
•
•
•

12Noon -1 PM

Free and Open to the PubUc • Door Prizes
'

.

Kellogg's plant provides cereal
and the Herr's snack food plant
provides the chips.
The disean:led foods are fme
nutritionally,. fcttmers are
quick ·to point out. Potatoes
are the · main ingredient for
chips, wheat for pretzels. The
reasons they're discarded
vary : the chips are overcooked, the cereal too. old.
Often the cattle snacks are
swept off the factory floor.
Jim Herr bought his cattle
farm 18 years ago primarily as
a place to discard snack food
plant leftovers from his family's business. The thou·sands
of gallons of water used to
wash potatoes now hydmte the
hay crop, for instance.
The daily diet for his 650
cattle is heavily supplemented
by the nearby snack food

0

• 1,.

•

I h . ill l1 . 1111 I \\ , lint ._-., I ), p. n 1111 t rr 1 r 1 1 ~ Jrr 1

the future.

Herr Angus Farm cattle are fed a party mix· of potato chips,
pretzels and popcorn in Nottingham, Pa. (AP)

'.

"Cardiac Risk Factors"

( n 111111111111 \

ily farm seem eager at the
trough, they have good reason.
No mundane meal of corn and
hay here. This feed is spiced
with a snack food-lover's
smorgasbord: potato chips,
" cheese curls and pretzels.
Blessed bovine elsewhere in
Pennsylvania get even sweeter
treats: chocolate balls and
Frosted Mini-Wheats.
While cattle lillve been eating human food bypn:xiucts for
years, more farmers this winter
are filling !)!e trough with
snack food goodies, a moneysaving solution to high corn
prices caused by last surmner's
droullht.
InCiustry experts say that
becanse feeding livestock dis, carded human food saves
money an~ helP.s the environment, Besste will be munching
on potato chips more often in

If you have over extended yourself and feel that there is no
wa~ out of debt, call CreditXpress today, and ask about our
Loah Consolidation First Aid Kit. One of our friendly Debt
Sp9cialists Ca:h set-Lip all of your existing loans, credit cards, etc.
into one, low monthly consolidation payment.

10-HOUR FAST BEFOREHAND

II II II'

N0111NGHAM, Pa. (AP)
- If the cattle at the Herr fam-

,

"'

..

.

Special Presenll!tion by Michael A. Englund, 00

t ,1

Thursday, February 6, 2003.

credit
Crisis?

In Friday's
Newspaper!

YOU MUST PRE-REGISTER
BY 4 PM ON THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 13th.
CALL (740) 446-5055.
SCREENING INCLUDES A

I n r r11 o 1 t i 11lur 111,11 i r111.

Department
of
Management is
still waiting for test results from
blood samples taken from 20 of
Mohammed's high-risk animals, Ayars said. Depending on
those results, the agency may
decide to perform soil remediation to further prevent the possibility of disease spreading.
Mohammed, of Roslindale,
Mass., signed over the control
of the animals to the stare earli·
er this month and agreed to an
$800 fine and fees in exchange
for the agency not filing
charges, said Dr. Christopher
Hannifin, the state's public
health veterinarian.

'"

I'

Institute

The

E~vironmental

'Wind ·farms' coming under fire

Edidon

Sponsored by the Holttr Medical Center
Community Health and Wellness Deportmem
and Cardiopulmonary Units

For this special screening...

and the Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals euthanized the remaining 75 sheep and ~oats last
week and brought therr carcasses to a landfill.
The department was concerned the animals may have
had diseases including tuberculosis, brucellosis and scrapie.
Kenneth Ayars, chief of .the
department's agricultural division, said officials will be keeping a clo~ eye on the farm for
several years.
''We very rarely run into these
types of situations in Rhode
Island, but we're concerned
about the world situation and
diseases that can be catastrophic," he said.

.

~

..

Annual Heart Fair

Special Screening
Available

Down on,the Fann

Farm that housed sick animals In the chips: More cattle
faces_ five-ye~r quarantine
dine on human snack food

~

Snowfall set for area tonight

AEP - 22.66
Arch Coal - 17.26
Akzo - 25.78
AmTech/SBC - 25.35
Ashland Inc. - 28.05
AT&amp;T - 18.36
Bank One - 35.65
BLI- 11 .41
Bob Evans - 21 .95
BorgWarner - 55.05
Champion - 3.17
Charming Shops - 3.52
City Holding - 28.88
Col - 20.61
DG - 10.91
DuPonl - 37.40

The Daily Sentinel

Page A3

!h ..; 11 -

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

t'

..

Third Saturday of every m6nth (All Day)
Taught by a Certified Childbirth Educator
r
FREE to PVH patients - $25 charge to patients from other facilities
Expectant mothers need to be at least 32 weeks (8 months) for class
Loved ones are encouraged to participate

'
"

P;LEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

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·Obituaries

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Walter Wilson

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The. Daily Sentinel

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111 Court .Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

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www.mydallysentlnel.com

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Den Dickerson
Publisher

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Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

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Letters to the editor are welcome. They sllould be less than ·
300 words. All letters are subject to editing anti must be
stgned and include address and celephone number. No
umigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good
taste. addressing issues. nor personalities.
11te uj1inions expressed in the column below are the conmtsux of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. 's editorial board,

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tlnles.\" oth etwise noted.

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NATIONAL VIEW

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Congress sends wrong
message with ethics
provision .rollback

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KONDRACKE'S VIEW

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Presidential critics appear to be enterin.g ~election : mode· ·~:,
Democrats '-have been pummeling
President Bush so hard, you'd think it was
2004 already. After the State of the Union,
theyoughttoletupabitonlraqpolicyat least until the administration delivers an
intelligence report to the United Nations
next week.
Bush delivered a forceful argument that
Iraq has systematically violated U.N.
Security Council Resolution 1441 - he
silenced the House chamber in doing so
-but his critics likely won't be satisfied
unless ·Secretary of State Colin Powell
serves up a "smoking gun" in his Feb. 5
report.
Despite - or maybe because of Bush's historic midterm election victory
Nov. 5, Democrats have ~ven him no
quarter on domestic or foreign policy. ·
Most nota.bly on the attack is formerly
mild-mannered Senate Minority Leader
Thomas Daschie (s.D.), who appl1.ed an
old J.yndon Johnson term, "credibility
g~p;" to Bush and made it clear it means
"liar."
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"Tilis is a White House," Daschle said
.on M()nday, ''that promises one thin~
knowing full well it is deliverinjl another.
He ticked off a list- pronusing relief
to the middle class while rewarding
wealthy investors, promising to protect
the homeland but blocking funds to do so
-and said Bush's credibility gap is
"growing with each new broken promise,
each new misleading claim and each new
case of bait and switch."
The level _of p~isanship running
through Walihington IS at record highs for
a non-election year - possibly because.
Democrats sense from recent polling that
Bu_sh's support is waning, possibly
because 0elll&lt;lq3ts are still mad that they
got beat in November.
Bush's overall &lt;1pproval rating is do~n
only 3 percent since the election -from
63 percent to 60 percent, according to
Gallup - but his ratings on the economy
and foreign policy have sunk to 49 percent and 50 percent, respectively.
Even the Democrats official State of
the Union response, normally a bland critique, was sharp. "In 100 many ways, our

• Vindicator, Youngstown, Ohio, on Congress: In a reversal of folk wisdom, which holds, "If it ain't broke, don't fix
it," Congress has taken something that was fixed, and it has
broken it.
When the 108th Congress reconvened Jan. 7, it might have
been expected to get right to work on saving Social Security
or cutting taxes or addressing the budget and its looming
deficits or tackling the health care crisis.
But, no, one of the first things the U.S . House of
Representatives did was roll back the 1995 ethics rules that
prohibited members of Congress from accepting all-expensespaid vacations from lobbyists or elaborate gifts of expensive
food.
We never thought we' d hear ourselves pining for the days of
Speaker Newt Gingrich, but at least he had a sense that the
peoples' !:louse should be careful about the messages it sent.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Feb. 6, the 37th day of 2003. There
are 328 days left in the year.
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· Today' s Highlight in History:
On Feb. 6, 1952, Britain's King George VI died; he was
succeeded as reigning monarch by his daughter, Elizabeth
II.
On this date:
ln 1756, America's third vice president, Aaron Burr, was
born in Newark, N.J.
In 1778, the United States won official recognition from
France with the signing of treaties in Paris.
In 1788, Massachu se tts became the sixth state to ratify
the U.S. Constitution.
In 1895 , baseball legend Babe Ruth was born in
Baltimore.
In 1899 , a peace treaty between the United States and
Spain was ratified by the U.S. Senate.
In 1933, the 20th Amendment to the Constitution, the socalled "lame duck" amendment, was deClared in effect.
In 1943, a Los Angeles jury acquitted actor Errol Flynn
of three counts of statutory rape.
In 1959, the United States successfully test-fired for the
first time a Titan intercontinental ballistic missile from
Cape Canaveral.
In 1978 , Muriel Humphrey took the oath of office as a
Un ited States se nator from Minnesota, filling the seat of
her late husband, former Vice President Hubert Humphrey.
In 1991, comedian and television performer Danny
Thomas died in Los Angeles at age 79.
Ten years ago: Tennis Hall-of-Farner and human rights
advocate Arthur Ashe died in New York at age 49.
Five years ago : President Clinton and British Prime
Minister Tony Blair redoubled their pledge to use military
force against Iraq if necessary; during a joint news conference in which the subject of Monica Lewinsky came up,
Clinton said he would "never" resign. President Clinton
signed a bill changi ng the name of Washington National
Airport to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
One year ago: A federal judge ordered John Walker
Lindh , the so-called "American Tali ban," held without bail
pending trial. Britain's Queen Elizabeth II reached a bittersweet milestone, somberly marking 50 years as
· monarch on the anniversary of the death of her father,
King George VI.
Today' s Birthdays: Former President Ronald Reagan is
92. Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor is 86. Actor Patrick Macnee is
81. Actor Rip Torn is 72. Actress Mamie Van Doren i's 72.
Actor Mike Farrell is 64. NBC News anchorman Tom
Brokaw is 63 . Singer Fabian is 60. Actress Gayle
Hunni cutt is 60. Actor Michael Tucker is 59. Producerdirector-writer Jim Sheridan is 54. Singer Natalie Cole is
53. Actor Jon Walmsley is 47. Actress Kath y Najimy is 46.
Rod mu sician Simon Phillips (Toto) is 46. Actor-director
Robert Townse nd is 46. Actor Barry Miller is 45. Actress
Mega n Gall agher is 43. Rock singer Axl Rose (Guns N'
Roses) is 41. Country singer Richie McDonald (Lonestar)
is 41. Singer Ri ck Astley is 37 : Rock musician Tim Brown
(Boo Radleys) is 34. Actor Brandon Hammond is 19.
Thou ght for Today : " If you can talk brill iantly about a
problem, it ca n create the consoling illusion that it h ~s
bee n mastered." - Stanley Kubrick, movie director
( 1928 - 1999).

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· · · uves'at risk to get rid of lilin." .hfld, he .'.:
accused Busl:l.. qf ."shoFt-cix&gt;;ui~ipg an
i,nspectioi)S p~ . ~e . ?elflillldll9 i.n tht; !
firstplac;e." .: . , ~· .. ,, '
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He said that Bush. lacked .:·a guiding , ,
principle" for . bi~ ;wat P91i&lt;;y;W)" s11~est• , ,
ed Bush. give .. "mw.f to, !11~ , Y.(orld' that .. ,
Husseiri posse~$es l!lll!IM.9S o.f mas§ -r
VODA..n..;ke destruction.
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Kerry, who seelW' tQ . jxHJrguin~ both ,'
ways on the war, ·said that "we don t have . ~:
to go to war ·... unti,l we ljave e¢austed·
COLUMNIST
the remedies availaple; bl,lilt 'legitimacy :;·
and earned the consent of .the American ·t
· people - absent, of course, an imminent
country is headed in the wong direction," threat requiring urgent action."
said Washington Gov. GflfY Locke. ,
, . With exceptions like Liebennan and,.,..,
Bush's economic plan· :~does too little to Gephardt, Democratic lead~~ to,be r
stim,ulate lbe economy)now and does too .bflCk in .the position they weie 'in 1991;· ~much to weaken our eeonomic furore.'' ~hen they. voted agai~t waging the first ...
He added that it was ''Wrong" and "irre- . Persian Gulf War, fusist.ii{g ro0~litile w!is;-4
sponsible"
eliminatefitaxes
d .or
£
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. toaril
. on stock div- n
saneu·ons 1o work. ... ~
1 nds, pnm Ybene tmg the top I per- They'd certainly deny ir,:bnt r:&gt;emoctat~ : ".
_cent oftaxp~yers. .
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. . . s~ro tq ~handing a vet~, on,U.S. pol\cr ~~
· Democr~tlc pres1dent1al can~1dates ·10 France, Germany, R.uss1a and China ~ •~
took Similar ·wh_acks. Rep ... R!chard or,toJ~q. which can ·keep ·U.N; -'Wtlapons : ;·~~
Gephardt (Mo.) ,srud ~at Bush f~~tt_ IQ .lnspectof$ on what Bush_ called "a scav-' ' ·
ease. the natiOn s arooety over his ~o- enger hunt" indefinitely. '· ~ · · ' · · ·
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nonuc .PI~ !lld fell short of addressmg
Bush's case Tuesday nigHt was that the -~
the n~on s mcreasmg concern about the United Nations gave Iraq a "fimll oppor- ·•.
future.
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tunity" to disatm. He qted ·a' l.jlliny of
Sen. .Joe Lieberman, ·{~onn.) dec!~ examples: 25,000 liters of anthrax; 38,000 1' '
that on the.eco':lomy, 'Bush has offered . Jiters . of -botulinum toxin:, 500 .tons of':
no leaclership -- ~ust a one-not~ stratej!Y pf: chemical weapons and JO;dOO ·chemical .:~
!ID' cu~ we can t afford.... His al?proach munitions unaccounted for; sCientists for- '.'
1 ~ u~atr, unaffordable and totally meffec- bidden (o talk to inspectors; U.N. surveillive.
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Ian~ p13J1eS forbid4ef! ~fly. . , . .
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Even on Iraq, where Lieberman supBush pronuse&lt;J•that·on•:Feb. $v.~oweU .,
~rts Bush, the se~ator felt Cl?mpell~ to would . present "iruormatioii:' an'ct mtelli~ ..
J~m thl; Democra~Ic claqu~ 1~ accusmg ,gence about Iraq's illegal weapons prohim 0~ 'undemunm~ Ame~ca s standin~ grams_.lt$ attempts to _hid~ \hQ~~~: y.:e_apo.~s ~
When 11 resorts to urulaf7ralis~ often arro . from .~~~pectors and 1ts lirlks· pyterronst ~
gant treatment of our friends.
groups.
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Other Democrats; notably Daschle II!K'
Let's hope the administration' dui pre- ~
Sen. Joh_n Kerry (Mas,s.), ·are so. consiS· sent "smoking guns" that even Democrats
tently cntlcal of B~sh s 1faci policy that . and the French respect, so that the United
they seem to,be agamst gml!g to war, even · .·SW~s:.and its allies can ,unite around the ;
though th.ey voted 10 favor of 11 last fall. war - .and the 2004 election can be )
. On ·M~,nday, Daschle demanded ."to· .foilghtout on domestic policy.
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kno'!l' wh\lther the threat. Pre~nt~d b~
(Morton Kondracke is executive edito.r
lraqileade~ S~~ HusseJn IS so~- of Roll Call, the newspaper of .Capitol
nent that 1t JUStifies putting Amencan . Hill.)

Morton. ,

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THE VILLAGE IDIOT

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I noticed the oddest thing at the parking lot of the grocery store yesterday.
Half the patked cars had guys sitting
behind the wheel, just sitting there, staring straight ahead, waiting. They all had
thesamelookontheirface. That look as.
if they were in a doctor's waiting room
when the nurse walks in and announces
in a voice loud enough for everyone to
hear that they could come in now for
their digital prostate exam.
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I'm guessing their wives had run into
the store to quickly pick up something,
but then I wondered, how would it slow
them down if the husband went in with
them? Well, maybe some of these guys
are old or infirm. But certainly not all of
them. None of them were parked in a
handicapped spot. There were no little
handicapped tags hanging from their
mirrors, no markings on their license
plates. No, they were just sitting there
behind the wheel staring off into space.
I asked Sue about it. She said a lot of
women don't drive. Or don't like to
drive. ·
"My mother didn't like to drive," she
said. "Whenever she had to take us
somewhere she would always use the.
back streets. ' I don' t do interstates,' she

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used to say."
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A~ut !wo mmute~ latj:r, 'I guy ~rt?m the 1,
"Yes," I said, "but even if the women · Samtauon Department would wnte the . ,
don't drive, why is the guy sitting in' tlie apartment building a $50 .ticket for hav- '·
car? Why doesn't he go in the store with ing loose garb11ge on the sidewalk.
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her? Let's see, he can walk from his ·Now .that wt; live on .a farm, we wait ,.
house to the car, he can drive the car to until our ·weekly drive to the. _grocery , .
the store, he just can't get out of the car · store to return empty bottles. ·But some- ·
and go in the store? Help me here. If times weeks go by before 'I feel like '
he's too feeble to go into the store, returning them. In the return line in front ··
should he 'really-be_the one driving the of me was the town li~r{lri@,, Valerie..~
car?" Su~ shot me. the universal "I ll)l!f· , Sneb~indmpatiently tapping her foot. 'l
ried an idiot" look and shook her head. · "Hi," I said. "Didn't I see Bill sitting •.
While' Sue's shopping I'm returning outside in .your car?''
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bottles. 1\vo gatbage bags full of soda "Yes. He won't come in ·when I return
!Jo!tles. I u.sed to wonder what kind of bottles. He thinks it's embarrassing. He ·.
sick, twisted person would wait until thinks P.eople will think we need the ,
they had two entire bulging garbage money. ·
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bags full of bottles to return them. Now
Her garbage bags were .full of empty
I know. It's me.
beer cans. "You'd think he'd be more
When we lived in Manhattan it was so embarrassed that people might think :,
easy to get rid of empties. We would he's an alcoholic." ·
place them very carefully on top of the
"Yeah it doesn't seem to bGther him if ·
garbage waiting t~ ~picked up out on people think I'm an alcoholic .. Maybe 1.
the street and Wlthm . moments some that's why he insists on driving me to the T.
homeless _g uy wo~ld p1ck them up, put; ~ore even though I'm a mu~hJx:t~r dri- ..,
them m h1s shoppmg cart and take them ver. 'Because husbands don't let ·wives "to the redemption :center. We always drive drunk. Then he sits out in the car
were careful , to putthem right on top so and waits for me. lt's .so embarrassing." "
they wouldn t have to root around 10 the . Jim M,ul/en i.s the author of "It Takes • ,
rest of the garbage. .But about two m1.n- t\ '(illage Idiot: A. Memoir of Life After ;
utes later, another homeless man would the ·City" (Simon and . Sc~u~ter, 2001).
come by, not see .any bottles and proceed He also comributes . regularly to !·,
to root around m ~he garbage_for ten Entertainment Weekly, where he can be ~·
m1nutes, throwmg 11 every wh1ch way. reached atjim- mullen@ ew.cof11 .
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Association begins membership drive
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BY BRIAN J. REID
::Sta=fl~w;;,;rH.::e::..r- - - - - - -

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Community
Association has . begun its
2003 membership drive; and
the membership committee
reported on the drive during
the association's monthly
meeting Tuesday.
Sue Baker and Tom Dooley
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have mailed 80 letters to
members and potential members, and 30 members have
joined for the new year, said
Dooley, the association's
president.
A tele'phone follow-up is
also planned.
Last year, the association
had 45 active members,
Dooley said.
Dues are $10 for individuals and $25 for business mem-

BY

J. MILD lAYTON

Stall writer

POMEROY
While
everyone is charged the
same water rates, some people pay less.
·
According to Pomeroy
Mayor John Blaettnar, there
are several places with broken water meters.
. There are an additional
number of homes where the

meter is located in the basement. Residents who fail to
open doors for meter readers
for various reasons do not
have their meters read each
month.
, The village .still charges
these people for water service, but only at the minimum rate because there is
no way to prove a higher
water bill otherwise.
All council members

Driver cited
in accident

agreed at Wednesday .night's
meeting that this is a problem the village needs to
address. Council member
Victor Young III said this
situation is unfair to many
especially in the wake of the
water rate increase.
"People that are griping
about this have a legitimate
gripe," he said.
Kathy Hysell, clerk-treasurer, said the cost of pu~-

chasing a water meter is $35
to $50 per meter. Because of
the expense of replacing all
the meters at once, Blaettnar
said the village would consider replacing half of the
meters this year and half the
next.
Another measure that
would be taken to equalize
the situation for some would
be lo try and get keys to
properties where the meter

is loc ated in the basement.
Meter readers could get
advance permission to enter
these places when owners
were not present. If after a
quick knock, the meter reader discovers the owner not
home, then that persmi
could go in, get a quick
reading and leave. Many
places employ this method,
including Wellston and
Athens.

but France and others push for continued inspections
UNITED NATIONS (AP)Secretary of State Colin
Powell, relying on a stream of
U.S. intelligence, urged the
U.N. Security Council on
Wednesday to move against
Saddarn Hussei.n because Iraq
has failed to disarm, harbors
.terrorists and hides ·behind a
"web of lies." .
His extraordinary presentation in the packed council
chamber included satellite photographs, intercepted conversa-

Police

Raymond Kirk

EMS calls

Local Briefs

Fun night
planned

Issued
licenses

File divorces

POMEROY - Divorce
RACINE - County Road actions have been filed in
30 on Morning Stat at the Meigs County CGmmon
intersection of Wessel Road· Pleas Court by Sharla Kay
will be closed for repair work Denney,
Middleport,
on Monday and Tuesday, a against Sean Eric Denney,
Meigs County Highway Middleport;
and
by
Garage
spokesman Michael J. Letson Sr. ,
announced.
Bidwell, against Patricia
K. Letson, Reedsville.

RUTLAND Revival
. services at the Free Will
Baptist Church, now in
progress, 7 . p.m. nightly
through Saturday, with Jamie
Fortner, evangelist. Pastor
Paul Taylor, pastor, invites
the public .

with the village's tree committee to access state funds
now in a village account for
the planting of trees in the
business district.
The tree · committee has
been inactive for four yeats,
Dooley said, and the association hopes that the plantin_gs
can be completed w1th assistance from the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources.

For the Record Powell presents stream of evidence against Iraq,

Deaths

Revival in
progress

in May, and the July 4 festivities in Dave Diles Park. ·
Baker and Meigs County
Tourism Director Betsy
Nicodemus will coordinate
the community yard sale, an
annual event held the first
weekend in May, and Jane
Harris, Brenda Merritt and
Baker will head up the Fourth
of July Committee.
Dooley said the association
plans to coordinate efforts

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POMEROY . - Jennifer
V. Anthony, 21, 38287
Ohio Route 684, Pomeroy,
was cited for failure to
control by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol following
a
one-car
accident
Wednesday on Salisbury
Township
Road
77
(Naylor's Run).
Troopers said Anthony
was westbound, 221 feet
west of TR 208 (Starcher)
at 1:45 p.m. when tbe car
she drove slid off the left
from PageA1
side. of the road and struck
an embankment. The car
came to ~st on the berm, little more than two or three
weeks.
the report said.
MIDDLEPORT
The village is stuck with
Functional damage was
· · Raymond
Kirk,
79,
the
exorbitant cbst of a
Middleport, died at his resi- reported to the car.
physical
and with nothiilg to
dence Wednesday, Feb. !!,
show
for
its expense. If the
. 2003 .
officer leaves within a year,
He is survived by his wife,
this physical is still valid
Christina
Burns
Kirk,
POMEROY Meigs and can be applied anywhere
Middleport.
Emeraency Services units .
Private services will be answered the followins else - free of charge courheld for the fainily at a later calla for auistance on tesy of the taxpayers.
VIllage council members
date. Arranaements were Wedneaday.
discuued
lhiB iuue at their
handled by Fisher Funeral
CENTRAL
meetins Wedne&amp;di!Y niaht
Home in Middleport.
I :47
p.m.,
Fourth and are looklns into
Avenue,
Middleport, chanses. ·
They are considerlns
Atrlcla Randolph, Holzer
drafting an ordinance that
Medical Center;
· 7:!!1 p.m., Holzer· Meiss would require an officer to
Clinic, Bethany Bowles,, reimburse the villaae for the
physical if this person
Holzer;
8:17 p.m., Leadins Creek chooses to leave wfthin a
Road, Clyde Harrison, year to pursuit employment
elsewhere,
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
SALEM CENTER - Stat
Grange 778 and Stat Junior
Grange 878 will hold their
regular fun night and potluck
supper on Feb. I!! at 6:30
POMEROY -Marriage
p.m. at the grange hall on
from PageA1
County Road I near Salem licenses have been issued
in Meigs County Probate
Center.
Court to Phillip Andrew . that would increase the perMcCoy, 22, Davisville, centag11 retained by the vilW.Va., and Christie Dawn !age to 15 percent of the
Barber, 18, Tuppers Plains; insurance settlement. ·
Carl Edward Rowan and
The property owner would
POMEROY- A chili sup- Jennifer Rose Arthur, 21, have that amount returned
per will be held on Feb. 24 at Racine; Lewis Edward Gnly if the" property was
God's NET in Pomeroy for Hilton, 26, Syracuse, and repaired or destroyed. .
the benefit of the youth pro- Stacey Irene Theiss, 28,
There are legal questions
gram.
·
R
b
M
·
pending
as to the amount of
Syracuse; 0 ert
artm time an owner would have to
Serving will be from 4 to 7
p.m. Price is $4 for adults, , Shepherd, 21, Rutland, and act, but council members said
and $2 for children. The sup- Joyce Marie Owensby, 19, they would have the village
and
Ernest solicitor investigate.
·
per is sponsored by the Rutland;
Thomas
Rollins
II,
30,
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Albany, and Jennifer Lee
Club.
Darst, 27, Albany.

Road to be
closed

bers, and Dooley stressed that
the association needs both
business members and individuals.
"The association emphasizes a working relationship
between residents and the
business community, and it is
important that we have that '
balance,'' Dooley said.
Committees have also been
formed to plan the association's Yellow Flag Yard Sale

Pomeroy addresses.water rate meter checks

Chill supper
fund-raiser set

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Going to the local store for many happy,re,turps ';
BY JtM MULLEN

POMEROY - Walter A.
"Puke" Wilson, 73, of Peach
Fork Road, Pomeroy, died
Tuesday, February 4, 2003, at
his residence.
He was born November 10,
1929, in Pomeroy, son of the
late John and Maggie Hudson
Wilson.
He was an operation engiBen-Tom
neer
for .
Construction. He was a veter- .
an of the U.S. Army during
World War II, and was a
member of the Harrisonville
Masonic Lodge No. 411,
DAV in Middleport, and the
Feeney-Bennett Post No.
128, American Legion of
Middleport.
Surviving are his son and
daughter-in-law, Thomas E.
and Sheryl Wilson . of
Pomeroy; three daughters
and a son-in-law, Kathy
Herdman, Rhonda Fetty, and
Donna Jean and Jim Crump,
all of · Pomeroy; a brother,
Leonard 0. Wilson of St.
Augustine, Florida; two sisters and a brother-in-law,
Delsie Mathias of Ashley,
and Mary and Ed Voss of
Pomeroy; 15 grandchildren
and J6 great grandchildren;
and a special friend, John
Barss of Point Pleasant, West
Virginia.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Betty L. King Wilson; two
sisters, Agnes Mowery 1!I1f1
Ethel Hysell; and a brother,
John Wilson Jr.
Services will be 11' a.m.
Friday, February 7, 2003, at
Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy, with Paul Ed Voss
officiating. Burial will follow
at Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funer.al home from 2 to 4 and 7 to
9 p.m. 'Thursday, February 6,
2003. .
Masonic services will be
held at 8 p.m. Thursday,
February 6, 2003.

The Daily Sentinel• Page AS

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

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Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Thu...clay, February 6, 2003

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Correction
TUPPERS PLAINS
Robert Warner was included in the honor roll for
Eastern Elementary School
for the second grading
period. His name was
incorrectly reported in
Monday 's edition.

Fire

tions between senior Iraqi officers and statements from informants that could make or break
support for going to war with
Iraq.
Russia, France, China and
other council members skeptical of the need for a military
confrontation said they would
review the evidence and
demand
answers
from
Baghdad. Most said weapons
inspections should continue,
Iraq must immediately cooper-

ate and diplomatic efforts
should be sought to avert war.
France and Germany went
further, .calling for strengthening the inspections regime that
was already toughened up in
November under a Security
Council resolution crafted by
Washington and adopted by an
unanimous council.
Three . months after Iraq
pledged that it would disarm,
Powell presented his evidence
to a high-level audience of for-

eign rrunisters and ambassadors
in an appearance that was televised live to an anxious world.
"The gravity of this moment
is matched by the gravity of the
threat that Iraq's weapons of
mass destruction pose to the
world," Powell said. "This
body places itself in danger of .
irrelevance if it allows Iraq to
continue to defy its will."
While Powell spoke, Iraqi
TV carried a day-old i.nterview
with Saddarn.

Former members of NASA safety panel
question reasons for their dismissal
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
- 1\vo years ago, NASA dismantled an expert panel that
was questioning the budgetsttapped space agency's longterm plans for safety. Now, with
the Columbia dis111ter bringing
safety issues to the fore, soq~e
are wondcrins why panel membets were dismissed.
·
Five · of nine members of
NASA's Aerospace Safety
Advisory Panel and two consultanta to the panel were teDiaced
in the summer of2001, m1dway
throuih their annual review, by
then-fii'ASA Administrator Dan
Cloldin. Most of those removed
had more than a dozen years of
service.
"I don't have any direct
knowledge that we were kicked
off because of our views or
positions, but I do know that we
annoyed some people," said
John B. Stewart, a former aerospace consultant who served 21

years on the board and now
lives in Knoxville.
A sixth member, retired Navy
Vice Adm. Pemard Kaudercr,
resigned after the dismissals.
And the chairman, Richard
Blombera of Stamford, Conn.,
Will repiaced soon after the
Jl811el's report to NASA and
Conaress was completed in
March 2002.
Stewart, Kauderer and
Blomberg all stressed that no
connection can be drawn
between the panel's turnover
and the Columbia dis111ter on
Saturday, which killed all seven
astronauts on board.
· "I couldn't f.OS&amp;ibly say that.
In fact. I don t think it is retevant to Columbia at all,"
Stewart said. "But it will be reievant once the shuttle (program) gets flying ll$ain.
"How are you gomg to maintain these vehicles fur the long
term? Will you make invest-

Clinic

vacated.
Tentative plans are being
made to move the equipment
at that time into the Veterans
Memorial Hospital building
and then whenever a dentist
is found, operate the clinic
from that location on a parttime basis.
"Meanwhile, we'll just
keep praying we can find a
dentist willing to come here,"
concluded Torres.

from Page A1
place and all we need is a
dentist. It's just too good to
let go," said Torres.
She acknowledged that if
something doesn't tum up by
the end of March, the current
clinic building will have to l)e

PIJBLIC . NOTICE
.
FROM COLUMBUS SOUTHERN POWER COMPANY
AND OHIO POWER COMPANY
Pursuant to the Companies' Capacity and Energy Emergency Control
Program approved by the Public Ulllltles Commission of Ohio, the Companies
hereby apprise the public ol the stale ol electric service In their service areas.
ELECTRI C POWER SUPPLY FAC I LIT IES
The Companies' electric power supply facilities - including power
· generating plants, major transmission facilities and lnterconnection.s V.:ith
neighboring electric utility systems- are expected to be adequate to provrde
reliable electric service to their customers , and , at the same time ,
accommodate likely load and capacity contingencies. Generating capacity
reserve margins orthe American Electric Power (AEP) Ohio System. or which
Columbus Southern Power and Ohio Power are part, are expected to be 16%
or more or load throughout 2003 and into peak load period of next winter
2003104.
Generating-capacity reserves are required to meet unexpected
increases In system load, to provide for an effective program of preventive
maintenanceor generating facilities, and to allow for random shutdowns and
loading curtailments of generating units.
·
ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY
Approximately 99% of the AEP Ohio System's power generating
capacity Is coal-fired and remainder is hydroelectric. The Companies believe
that their coal supplies are adequate to enable them to meet the anticipate4
electric energy requirements of their customers during the year.

ments now that will make that
possible? All of those issues
come right back to the surface
as soon as the three remaining
shuttles are declared operational."
NASA Associate Deputy
Administrator
Michael
Greenfield said Wednesday that
''the panel had done a wonderful job," but the agency decided
it would benefit frOm new
members with more specific
bigh-tech skills.
The advisory sroup. made up
of former NASA officials ana
outside experts, Will fonned by
Congress ln the wake of the
1967 Apollo spacecraft fl!C that
killed three astronauts.
NASA's inspector general
suggested in 1997 that too
much time on the ~el might
impede a-- member s "independence, objectivity and willingness to delve into areas .of substance and controversy.''

�Page A6 • The

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 6, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Purdue defeats Wisconsin, Page 82

PageBl
Thursday, February 6, 2003

James back
on the court
Pomeroy/
Middleport

February is Black
History 'Month·

Blues music
1 Greg Schaber and
High Street will perform
at the Court Grill, 112
Court St., Pomeroy at 9
p.m. on Saturday. To
hear the blues group
there is a $5 cover
charge.
From 9 p.m. to 2 a.m.
on Tuesday, there will be
an open jam with
Jeremy Russell.
For more information
on either event call (740)
992-6524 or go to
www .courtstreetgrill.
com

· Visit your local library or community
center to find out more about the men and
women who influenced the history of
African-Americans and the United States.

jPt. Pleasantj
Dance

!PortSmouthj
'Works
on Paper'
• An art exhibition
titled "Works on Paper"
is showcased in Shawnee
State University's Vern
Riffe Center for the Arts .
through Feb. 9.
The show, housed in
the Appleton Gallery,
features selected works
by Huntington, W.Va.,
artists Katherine · Cox,
Mary Grassell, Peter
Massing, and Barbara
Marsh-Wilson.
There is no admission
charge to view "Works ,
on Paper." The Appleton
Gallery is open from 9
a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays.
For information, call
(740) 351-3118.

!lfuntingtonl

1 Country and western
dance, 7 to 10 p.m.
Friday, Senior Center.
High Country will perform. Enjoy clogging,
square dancing, and slow
dancing. Refreshments
available. Proceeds will
be used for future senior
center activities. (No
alcohol or smoking at the
center.)

Black art
expo

Civil rights leader
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

• ."Selections from the ·
Black Art Expo," a juried •
exhibition, will be on
display at the Huntington
Museum of Art from
Saturday,
Feb.
I
through Sunday, March
16.
Reception and
awards ceremony is at 7
p.m. Feb. 22 featuring I!
slide lecture by celebrat~
ed
African-American
artist Donald . Eatley,
who is in Huntington
Feb. 21-23 doing work;
shops. Call (304) 5292701.

Scientist Georca
Waahlntton Carver

Blues
and more

5i

'

1 The Point Pleasant
Artist Series is pleased to
present the Bourbon
Street Brawlers at 8 p.m.
Feb. 13, 2003, at the
State Theater.
The
Brawlers,
a
delightful
ensemble,
combine the influences
of Delta blues, ragtime,
gospel, and jazz to recreate
the
magical
sounds that once filled
the Southern music halls,
sternwheelers,
and
honky-tonks along the
mighty Mississippi.
Bandleader Jay Flippin
is a renowned musician
and educator who captures the spirit of the
music and culture by his
know ledge and insight of
the bygone era. The
result is one of authenticity that many music
lovers will certainly
enjoy and appreciate.
For ticket availability,
please contact Jane Coles
at (304) 675-2719 or
Betty Kauff at (304) 6753746.

Book
• •
s1gmng

Black Muslim leade,r
Malcom X
Unclertrounct
RallrOlld 'conductor'
Harriet Tubman

Drecl Scott

Secretary of State
Colin Powtll

•
Jean Davidson,
granddaughter of one of
the founders of the ·
Harley-Davidson Motor
Co., signs copies of her
book, "Growing Up
Harley·Davidson,"
a
memoir of her family
and a history of the
motorcycle company,
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m: ·
Saturday, Feb. 8, during Harley's tOOth anniversary
celebration at
Benjy's, 408 4th St. Her
book is also available for
purchase. Call (304 X
523-1340.

Ironton

ICharleston I

I··

Art exhibit :.

'Disney
on Ice'

• Janice LeBrun, an :
Ashhind artist, displays •
her work through Feb. 20
in the Collins Center of
Ohio
University.
Southern, 1804 Liberty
Ave. Hours are from 8:30
a.m. to 9 p.m. daily and
8:30 to 4 p.m. Saturday.
Call Gary Tillis, (740)
533-4565.

1

Disney's "Jungle
Adventures," now playing at the Charleston
Civic Center through
Feb. 9. Tickets range
from $32-$11. For more
information, call (304)
345-SHOW.

19th-century
abolitionist
Frederick Dou!llan

College basketball

Prep basketball

Eastern grounds
Falcons 68- 45·

AKRON (AP) - LeBron
James was cleared to play by
a judge who temporarily
blocked a state ruling that
stripped the high school basketball star of his eligibility.
James, expected to be the
No. I pick in the NBA draft,
can rejoin his team but must
sit out one more game this
season, Su'"mit County
Judge James Williams ruled.

BY

Sports correspondent
_:___ _ _..:..__ _ _ _ _

Knight wins
SOOth game
LUBBOCK, Texas (AP)
- With fans chanting his
name and the magic number,
Bob Knight won his SOOth
game, becoming only the
fourth Division I men's
coach to reach the mark in
guiding Texas Tech over
Nebraska.

Wllllahls
settles) wsult
TRENTON, N.
Former NBA st
Jayson
Williams settled a c1 il lawsuit filed by the fam y of a
limousine driver w
was
shot to death at his
nsion.
Williams' attorneys ' d_n~
release terms of the settle:
ment, which was filed
Wednesday afternoon in state
Superior
Court
in
Hackensack.

m

Manning signs
with Pistons
AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
(AP) - Free agent forward
Danny Manning signed a
contract with the Detroit
Pistons and was in uniform
against the Los Angeles
Clippers. The 36-year-old
. _Manning hasn't played since
last season with Dallas.

Cincinnati's Leonard Stokes has his shot blocked by Louisville's Erik Brown during the first
half of their game Wednesday In Louisville, Ky. (AP)

.II
t
r
m
RS
.
LOu ISVI e u ..··. . .
. . •nAIt •I ·77 7:h
"' ·
.
.·

·

'

.

Mariucci to be
paid.$2.5M

~-· ·.

' -,

·

•

1'

DEAL. IN TOWN

r _

..
LOUISVILLE,
· · - ·· Fr~shman Framcisco
· · ., Garcia scored a career-high
DETROIT (AP) .A
24 points and tied a school
record with eight 3-pointers
source with frrsthand know!as No. 5 Louisville beat
edge of the contract negotiaon
lions between Detroit and
Cincinnati
77-71
new coach Steve Mariucci Wednesday night to extend
who spoke on the condition
the nation's longest ~JCtive
of anonymity - said the
winning streak to 16 p s .
Lions will pay Mariucci
Reece Gaines scolttl 17
about $25 million over five
points and Marvin St~e had
1 L " rebOunds . for
the
ye~:..Vever, some are upset
Cari.JI'rla1\l'.'
07-1,
7-0
with the organization's hiring ·
Conference USA), who are
off to the program's best start
process.
since the 1955-56 team won
fi 20
Gene Upshaw, executive
19 of its ITS!
director of the NFL Players
games. The winning streak is the
Association,
joined
longest for Louisville since
Pittsburgh Steelers · owner
the 1985-86 squad won its
finall7 games on the way to
Dan Rooney and attorneys
Cyrus Mehri and Johnnie
the program's second NCAA
championship.
Cochran in criticizing the
Lions for failing to follow
Jason Maxiell scored 21
Louisville' Bryant Northern (3) closes in to try to block a shot
the NFL's new policy of seriand Field Williams added 14
attempt by Cincinnati's Aeld Williams during the first half of
ously interviewing at least
for the Bearcats (13-6, 6-3),
their. game Wednesday in Louisville, Ky. (AP)
one minority candidate for
who've lost three in a row
each coachi!Jg vacancy.
fo( only the fifth time in give Louisville a 45-29 lead,
The Bearcats closed the
Coach Bob Hu~ins • 14 sea- its widest to that point.
gap
to six three times, but got
· · k d
h·
sons. Cincinnali is in danger
8
0
no
closer.
of not winning at least :a
. ut arc•a plc. e up •s
Garcia
tied
James
share of the Conference WS)\ third foul. ~e mmutes l~ter
school
record
with
Brewer's
regular-season title , f&lt;* ~~ . ~~ LoUISVIlle co~ch Rick
first time in the ··~eli~'$ ·· P1t1no bencb~d h,rm. The a 3-pointer from the corner
NEW YORK (AP)- John
eight-r.ear
histOry. :'~.~ :~';r ·. :~ ·Bearc~ts \Vent?".a ~2-4 run with · 2:40 left that put
Hirschbeck became the secLouisville up 65-56.
While Garcia and.i~es ·o\rer ~e nex! ~~ DllDUtes.
ond umpire in less than a
The Bearcats came into the
provided the offense; .· the . Games h1t a fadeaway
week to be given a I 0-day
the
Win
Jilmper
and
3-pomter
Cardinals
clinched
game
averaging a national
suspension because of inapwith
suffocating
full-c~
.
Louisville's
first.
by
someone
low 9.9 turnovers per game,
propriate comments.
pressure
down
the
stretcH.'!·
·
o~r
than
Garcta
as
the
but
committed a season-high
Hirschbeck got into a heat·
Cardinals
rebuilt
a
doubleGarcia
made
his
seventh
ed telephone conversation
PIHHIH UC. 82
pointer with 16:07 left to digit lead.
last month with Rob
Manfred, executive vice
president for labor relations
in the commissioner's office,
and made personal threats
against him. Hirschbeck was
upset that an acquaintance
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) -Anthony . five seasons, couldn 't contain Western's
was one of 26 baseball
Kann
scored
career-high 30 points as powerful inside game.
employees laid off on Jan.
Western
Michigan
overcame an 11-point
Junior forward Mike Williams scored 25
22.
deficit to beat Marshall 79-75 Wednesday points. Williams and Kann each had 12
night.
rebounds. Kann, a junior center, scored eight
Western's Rickey Willis also hit a career points during a 15-0 run that gave Western a
high 10 points with all of them coming in the 46-42 lead with 13:58 left.
last foui minutes. His frrst 3-pointer gave
Kann had four 3-point plays as the
Western a 67-66 lead with 3:45 left and the Broncos converted 26-of-30 free-throw
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Broncos
(13-6, 5-5 Mid-American) never attempts. Marshall was 14-of-16.
Chunichi Dragons started
trailed after that.
. Marshall head coach Greg White was hit
talks to release Kevin Millar
20
of
his
28
with a technical foul at 2:24 when Monty
Ronald
Blackshear
scored
after the team's general manpoints in the second half for Marshall (9-1 0,
·ager said it had given up try5-6), which had led 42-31 with 18 minutes Wright was whistled for fouling Willis on a
ing to convince the outfielder
left in the game after scoring the first nine 3-point play.
to go to Japan. The Boston
points of the second half.
A Robby Collum free . throw put the
Red Sox are hoping to sign
But the Thundering Herd, which lost its Broncos up by four and the Herd never got
Millar.
fourth consecutive· game for the first time in closer than three after that.

Second umpire
suspended

3..

a

Norris Northup Dodge

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Marshall falls to Western Michigan

Nothln1 MtiiUrtl Up To . 01'5
Whtn It comtt to... .

Scon WOLFE

•

TUPPERS PLAINS
Rocketing to a strong 25-2
advantage in the first period,
the Eastern Lady Eagles
cranked out a 68-45 TriValley Conference Hocking
Division win over the Miller
Falcons Tuesday night in a
girls' varsity make-up game.
Eastern is now 12-7 overall
in what has proven to be
great season for a young, but
aggressive Eastern team.
Morgan Weber led the
Eagles with 16 points and
seven rebounds, while
Alyssa Holter had a good
floor game and 13 points,
and a trio of Eastern lasses -Krystal
Baker,
Katie
Robertson, and Jess Hupp
each had eight, Jen Hayman
six, Krista White five, and
Jenny Armes four. Senior
Jessica Dillon has been out
with a knee injury, but still
plays a huge support role
from the bench.
For Miller Samantha
Britton led the Falcons with
12 points, Ashley Hinkle
added 11, Ashley Heaavener
six, Mandy Spencer four,
Malarie Altier four, Lora
Spencer three, Courtney
Hoops two, Kelsi Brown
two, and leona Bolyard one.
Aithough
closer
to
Ground Hog Day than
Independence Day, the ·only
shadows cast this night were
the ones from all the Eastern

have become a solid guard
tandem off the bench and
also were crucial in the g_ood
start, along with Casey
Smith and senior Krystal
Baker, who had one of her
best offensive nights of the
year.
When the
last spark
fluttered tu
e a r t 'h .
Eastern led
the
first
frame 25-2.
Miller sat
stunned. as
t h e. y
searched
Weber
for some
way
to
ve
rc
o
me
0
the Eastern
stampede..
The
se c o n d
p e r i o :d
numb ers
were more
even, how·
e v e r ,
Easte rn
Holter
outscored
the Falcons
18-11 and rolled on to a 4313 lead at the half.
After
three
rounds,
Eastern led 59-22. A~ain
the same combinatiOns
minus the full court aggression allowed Eastern to g~t
back on winning track in 'a
strong way. Eastern settled
into a zone for the final
round and substituted freely

fireE~~~~nu~:l~~t~~~::~ ~i~olding

on for the 68-45
sive full court press and upEastern hit 23-48 two's,
tempo transition game to 4-6 threefs for 66.7 percent,
blitz the Falcons before they and I 0-17 at the line .
,were able to get off the Eastern had 29 rebounds
'i'Jffliund.
Additionally. (Weber 7, Baker 50; II
' Eastern had a hot hand with steals (Hupp 4); three
nearly 65 percent shooting assists; and 16 fouls.
Miller hit 15-34 for 44
from the field in the stretch,
a boost that led to a strong percent, 1-3 three's, 12-23 at
23-48 at game's end for 47.9 the line and had 17 rebounds
percent, the Eagles best of · (Altier 8); eight steals; six
the season.
assists (Britton 2); and 18
Alyssa
Holter
and fouls.
Morgan Weber were the two
Miller won the reserve
m.Un cogs in this offensive game 35-16. Jenny Bolyard
blitz, but Katie Robertson, . and Ashley Heavener had 14
Jess Hupp, and Jen Hayman and six points respectively
also hopped on the offensive for the Falcons. Krista
band wagon early with good White had five for Eastern
offensive numbers. Krista and Cari Stegar four fot
White and Jenny Armes Eastern.

Lady Marauders
defeat Buckeyes
BY JtM SoULSBY
answered that with a three
.::S.::.po::rt.:.:s~c:.::o--rre.::.s~p--o_nd:_::e_n_t_ _ _ pointer of her own to give

POMEROY
The
Meigs Lady Marauders
picked up their third straight
win by defeating the
Nelsonville York Buckeyes
53-45 Wednesday night at
Meigs High School. The
win is the second for the
Marauders
over
the
Buckeyes in four days.
Samantha Pierce who
21
points
on
hung
Nelsonville on Saturday
topped that with a game
high 23-point effort in the
win. Jaynee Davis had a
monster game for the
maroon and gold as the
junior center hit for · 22
.points while collecting a
game high 16 rebounds.
"We execuied well; we hit
the open man on offense."
Meigs head coach Paul
Brannon said after the
game. "We were able to
hold Whitney Maiden down
and that was a key to the
win!," he added.
The first period was a see
saw affair as the teams traded baskets in the opening
minutesof the game. Ashley
Standall gave the Buckeyes
a 7-6 advantage, before
Shannon Soulsby pushed
the Marauders ahead with a
long three pointer from the
right side . Randee Patton

'

the Buckeyes back the lead
at 10-9.
Jaynee Davis then tied the
game at I 0 all hitting one of
two at the foul line. Patton
and Maiden combined to
score the games next seven
points as the Nelsonville
five opened a 17-10 gap hite
in the first ,period. Pierce
dramed a three ball to stop
the Buckeye run. Jordan
Bateman and Renee Bailey
traded baskets to end the
with
first
guarter
Nelsonville on top 19-15.
Behind the scoring of
Pierce and Davis the
Marauders cut the deficit to
one point with 4:08 left in
the half. Maiden scored
inside to up the advantage to
three points but that was
quickly erased when Davis
with an assist from Soulsby
converted a three-point play
to even the count at 25-25 .
Justine Dowler gave Meigs
the lead for good with a
jumper from the left wing
with :51 left in the half giving the Marauders a 29-27
lead at intermission.
Pierce opened the second
half with a steal and lay-up
that she fo llowed quickly
with a three pointer from the
right wing and the Marauder
lead grew to 34-27. Ashley

Ple•se see Melp, Bl

�· Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

· Thul'llday, February 8, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

'

Purdue defeats Wisconsin
WEST LAFAYEITE, Ind.
(AP) - II took only five minute' for Purdue to erase coach
Gene Keady's concern about
how the Boilermakers would
play as a ranked team.
It turns out a Top 25 ranking tits Purdue just fine.
"We were concerned about
our kids being ready," Keady
said of the Boilermakers' first
ranking in two years. ''That
was futile and wasted time on
my part. We were ready."
Willie Deane scored 19
points. Darmetreis Kilgore
added 17 and Chris Booker
14 as No. 24 Purdue beat
Wisconsin 78-60 Wednesday
ni,&amp;ht for its I Oth win in the
!liSt II games.
:The Boilermakers (15-4, 71 Big Ten) were playing their
first game as a ranked team
si nce March 2000 and may
have played their best game
o( the season.
:Wisconsin ( 15-5, 5-3) could
have moved into a first-place
tie with Purdue in the Big
Ten.
Instead,
the
Boilermakers dominated from
the opening tip and snapped
Wisconsin's five-game winning streak.
:The Boilermakers are 12-0
ac home and beat Wisconsin
for the 28th straight time at
The
Mackey
Arena.
Boilermakers are off to their
best start since goin~ 15-4 in
1997-98 and they ve won
four straight ·conference
games for the first time since
tile 1999-2000 season.

Deane, just named the Big work the ball inside against
Ten player of the week, Purdue's big men, often setscored the game's first II tling for mid-range jumpers
points - including three 3- that were off the mark.
pointers. Seven minutes into
Purdue was there to grab
the game, he converted a
three-point play 10 give the rebounds. Ivan Kartelo
Purdue an 18-1 lead.
had nine boards · as the
"I don't think I've ever had Boilermakers outrebounded
a player score the first II Wisconsin 46-27.
The Badgers missed their
pomts. That's a flfSt for me in
44 years of coaching," Keady flfSt 11 shots and were 5-forsaid.
29 from the floor in the ftrst
What made the rout even
more surprising was that half. They scored 12 points on
Wisconsin entered with the free throws.
best defense in the Big Ten,
Kilgore came off the bench
allowing only 59.1 points. and hit three 3s in the halfThey were only allowing 28.8 Purdue was 7-for-14 from the
rebounds, also the lowest in beyond the arc - and fin~
the conference.
ished off one of the nicer
Deane
said
the
f h
M
Boilermakers noticed some · plays 0 1 e game.
att
flaws in Wisconsin's defense Kiefer blocked a shot, picked
while reviewing the scouting up the loose ball and led a
report.
two-on-one fast break, ending
"We knew they lacked tran- with a dunk by Kilgore.
sition defense. We knew if we
That made it 27-5.
pushed it, we'd have an
With Indiana Pacers' Alledge," he said. "I was able to Star center Brad Mille~. a forget a couple of transition bas- mer Boilermaker, rooting
kets and .spark a little run."
Wisconsin didn't score its them on from behind the
first point until a free throw bench, Purdue would lead by
by Mike Wilkinson at 15:13 as many as 26. Wisconsin
and didn't score its ftrst field though, scored the final seven
goal until a driving layup by points of the half and trailed
Kirk Penney at 12:33.
41-22 at halftime.
Penney entered fifth in the
Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan
Big Ten in scorint with a 16.7 wasn't sure what went wrong.
average, but was eld to eight
''They deserve to be in ftrst
points on 3-for-15 shooting.
Alando Tucker Jed the place, and we've played
everybody but Indiana and
Badgers with 16 points.
The Badgers could never Michigan State," he said.

Pro basketball

Pistons upset Clippers 89-80
-AUBURN HILLS, Mich. points.
(AP) - The Los Angeles
"This was a game that
Clippers thought they might looked easier on paper than
have a chance to steal a win it really was," Carlisle said.
Wednesday night with the "We're playing well, but the
Detroit Pistons missing All- guys were serious about it
·Star Ben Wallace.
and no one got suckered
-Instead, Detroit unleashed into thinking it was going to
iti; secret weapon.
be easy."
:Rookie Mehmet Okur had
Los Angeles has lost four
tlie first double-double of in a row and seven of eight.
his career with 19 points
"I think a lot of guys .are
and II rebounds to lead the looking forward to the AllPistons to an 89-80 victory. Star break;" Elton Brand
"Mehmet is getting better said. "We just didn't battle
and better as he adjusts to at all in the first half, and
thi s league," Pistons coach the Pistons hit some shots
Rick Carlisle said. "'He's and got a big lead."
been used to the trapezoidal
Wallace is in Alabama
lane in Europe, but he's get- after the death of his mother
ting his low-post game and will go straight to
together over. here, and he Atlanta for Sunday's Allcomplements it with a nice Star game after the funeral
outside touch."
Saturday.
Okur, who entered the
"I told Memo that without
game averaging 5.1 points · Ben, we needed a doubleand 4.0 rebounds, was proud double from him - or
of his effort.
else," Jon Barry said. "He
."This might be my first got a lot of good looks
double-double, but my goal tonight, but that is going to
is to get one every night," change as teams ·realize that
he said. "My teammates he is a legitimate scoring
know where to get me the option. That's going to be
ball, and I'm getting used to his next adjustment."
them. Tonight was just
Cliff Robinson had 17
g(eat."
points for the Pistons and
:Detroit enters the All-Star Corliss Williamson added
break with a four-game win- 12.
ning streak, winning the last
"I think we all feel good
three by an average of 27.7 about what we have been

uc

from Page 81
22 and shot 39 percent (24of-61 ).
:Cincinnati seemed confused on offense from the
stllrt, turning the ball over
erght times in the first 6:38.
The Cardinals couldn't take
advantage though, missing

nine of their ftrst 12 shots.
Neither team led by more
than three until Garcia's third
3-pointer of the game gave
the Cardinals a 21-17 lead
with 6:47 left in the half.
The Cardinals hit seven of
their last 12 shots during a
half-ending 16-7 run.
The frustrated Bearcats finished the first half with 13
turnovers, more than they've
committed in all but four

able to do in the first half of
the season," Robinson said.
"We just have to get a little
hungrier in the second half.
We've got a chance. to battle ·
for home-court throughout
the playoffs, and we have to
focus on that."
Brand led the Clippers
with 18 points and Melvin
Ely had 14.
The Clippers kept the
game close for 14 minutes,
trailing 26-23 early in the
second quarter. ·
The Pistons, though, went
on .a 19-4 run to go up by
18. Detroit got six points
from Williamson and five
from
rookie Tayshaun
Prince dudng the surge.
"That was just a terrible .
second quarter," Clippers
coach Alvin Gentry said.
"We couldn't score and we
gave up 35 points." ·
Detroit led 56-32 at half·
time and was up by as many
as 27 in the third quarter
before taking a 77-55 edge
into the final period.
The Pistons let up in the
fourth, but the Clippers
never got the margin to single digits until Quentin
Richardson's 3-pointer with
a second left.
games this season.
Earlier
Wednesday,
Cincinnati announced that
guard Tony Bobbitt had quit
the team.
The 6-foot-4 junior had
been a key re'serve for the
Bearcats, averaging 7.2
points and 1.8 rebounds in 17
games. He scored 16 in the
Bearcats' 82-76 loss to No.
15 Marquette last Saturday.

Senator: USOC chief
Ward should quit
DENVER
(AP)
Mankamyer
resigned
Colorado
Sen. . Ben Tuesday after infighting
Nighthorse
. Campbell that was expected to result
wants
U.S.
Olympic in a vote of no confidence
Committee chief executive by the USOC exec-utive
Lloyd Ward to follow pres- committee. She was president Marty · Mankamyer sured to resign after · she
and quit.
was accused of working
The Republican lawmak- behind the scenes to get rid
er, one of five senators of Ward.
investigating the turmoil
Ward received a mild
within the committee, said reprimand from the execuhe would not officially call tive committee on Jan. 13
for Ward 'sresignation, the after he was accused of
Denver Post reported trying to steer Olympic
Thursday.
business to a company
But Campbell said Ward with ties to his brother.
told the Senate Commerce
Mankamyer agreed to
Committee last week that step down after Ward was
if there wasn't confidence cleared, then changed her
in him, he would resign if mind after five USOC
Mankamyer did.
members resigned in
"Well,
she
~Jas," protest over the Ward deciCampbell said.
sion.
Campbell
said
in
Executive
committee
Thursday 's New York member Herb Perez and
Times: "My view is if Pat Rodgers, the USOC's
they're going to start from former ethics officer, have
a clean slate, it would stop urged Ward to step down,
a lot of dissension if they too.
were both gone. But it's up
A USOC spokesman said
Ward wouldn't comment
to him."
The Post also reported . until the executive comthat interim president mittee's meeting Saturday
William
Martin,
the· in Chicago.
Mankamyer's resignaUniversity of Mic))igan's
· athletic director, is one of tion came. on the same day
three front-runners named the Post · reported that
by insiders to · head the while serving as a vice
Colorado Springs commit- president, she demanded
tee.
partial commission from a

fellow real estate agent
who sold property to Ward
-in 2001.
News of ihe real estate
deal appeared to be the
final blow for Mankamyer,
who had said she would
not be forced out'.
Citing
unidcmtified
USOC sources, the Post
said the three front-runners
to replace Mankamyer are:
Paul
George,
a
Massachusetts lawyer and
a USOC vice president;
. Michael McManus, Jr., a
USOC board member and
the chief executive officer
of Misonix Inc., an ultrasonic technology company
in Farmingdale, N.Y.; and
Martin.
Martin, USOC vice president-secretariat, ·said he
will do what is necessary
to return a sense of continuity to the organization.
The USOC has had four
presidents and CEOs since
2000.
Campbell suggested the
committee turn again to
Bill Hybl, USOC president
in 1991-92 and 1996-00.
Hybl said people have
talked to him about taking
over, but he wasn't a candidate. He is CEO of the
Olympic
Foundation,
which supports American
athletes with grants.

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Ohio River Bear
Pomeroy Flower Shop
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Robert Smith
Ernest Vanlnwag~n
Josephine Rilchie
Vnginla Smith
Harvey &amp; June'
Dorothy Roberts
Bernadine Snyder
VanVranken
Marie Roberts
Mica Rees· Ext~rlded Care
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AI &amp;. Kay Graham
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Dorothy Snyder
Nonga Roberts
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Rowena
Vaushan
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OhJinger,
PVH
Eymann
Publications,
Inc.
Jim
&amp;.
Marie
Snyder
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Paint Classes
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Pleasant Valley Hospital
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Betty Spencer
Charles Aldridge
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Helen 8odimer
Marcia Denison
Roger &amp; Rosemary Keller Eileen RO\uth
Caregivers Association
Phyllis
Spencer
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Walktr
Billy
Goble
liU1
Haynes
&amp;
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Eastman
WilliamAult
Earl &amp; Deny Denny
Manning
Roush
Beatrice Kennedy
Ohio Valley C tui ~tian
Janel Want.
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lane Walton, Meigs Coonty Cancer
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Clara Baer
tMr. &amp; MrS. Benny Dent ·( , Elsie.King
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Assembly
Dorothy
Warner
Bradford
Clturch
of
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Initiative
Ida
Spradlin
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&amp; neighbon
Marcia King
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Blenda
Roush
Jean
Thomas
We
Helen Spr11811C
Edison.lt Bt mice Qaker
Magdalene Rus5ell
Alta Dill
Aundl Klein
Rachel Smith
Betty .,biO&lt;teraW•&lt;lem~yet·l
Smith
Jean
Seidenabel
·Oia
St.
Clair
Larry &amp;'p~yllis Bake(
.Eleanor Kloos
Fnnk Ryther
Cecil &amp; Flossie Dillon "
Rosalie Johnson
· EI~Jitil~y ~ •• ....
., Duane Stanloy
Rost'Oe Wise
~ RObin Dorst
Helen Sanden
· ·Mannillg .!t June Kloes ..
Glen.
1'4'
Joan Slewan
~udnl&amp;:Wewll
.Co... Hcallll
., .,DiSirict
, ... , ,""'&gt;
Q&lt;:d
•. .
, Homer &amp; Alpha Bailey
. '1ellaSt~
Kadlleen e11s
Linda HansOn
l..aW"8 HOrsley, Meigs Coumy Health Sargcnl Chad Nc~l. Oh1o Stole
Daisy Saunders
Dorothy, Downie .
Earl Knight
Highwa}· Patrol
Ruth Stelhem
Dorothy ~ey
Deportment
·,.·lames &amp;'•Ei'&lt;f):D Barh)/ ·,' Elizabeth Dulljr , ·. ' '
Donna Sayre
ilal Kneen
Sharon
Stewart
Susie
Stewart
Lavada
Wheeler
Dave
Hannum
Undli
Russell
I® Barner· · · : .
Rudl Schultz
Rolland ~Jean Durst·
Challes Kuhl
Sheila
Bt:nd,
Ohio KePru
Arizona
Wigal
Don
Tate
Motors
Marcia
Arnold
Femdora Story
· ·Pnullne Bo)'bet . ~ ~
Ooldie Shaffer
Malion Eilstenltiy
Teresa LaComb
Syracus.e &lt;;:ou ntry Market
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Wilford
Debbie
Johnson
Margie
Blake,
Meigs
High
School
Abbi~
Stn)too
·Uvada B~s:''
' Adria Eblin
Fn,ncls Shaeffer
.. ~~HSio Landaker
Tomrn)l Hysell
De\ln McMiUian
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"•
''""'Y
Lautlennilt
,
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Thompaoll
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Rupe
Mmho,ll Wnm
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, ,1'
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Butcher
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·
'
' r: ' · ·
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ins
Edeen
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27
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of
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air
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Cecilia Mitch
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David
Slater
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Lawrence
Eblin
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Pine Hills Golf Course
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King,
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Extension
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·
Im~eMye"
Ed DIUliels
Pomero~ Library
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Quality Furniture Plus
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Jerry Cl![ient.r
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Ellie &amp; John Blaetmar
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Ethel Shasteen
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Gabriel Quartet· Rich &amp; Stacey Keams
Ladies Aulliliary
Chari•• &amp;Geraldine Hawk Brenda Neutzlins
Fisher Funeral Home
Raci ne American Legio n
PamSclwz
JohnettA Chapll)an
t-tark Coleman, PauiAndmon
Nii&gt;ini Nevill&lt;
Bony Hawley
Flatwoods U. Methodist Church
Post H602
Paula Pi&lt;kcno
Marcella Chapman
(leora• Hall
Rosy Niday
Jack &amp; Elizabeth Sawley
Fraternal Order of Eagles t217l
Racine Home National Bank
Naney Steveno, Holzer Hospital Diabetes Support Oroup
Exa Mae Chriltian
liowud Nolan
Geora• Price
Thelma Hayes
Gallipolis Harley Own en' Group
Ray Oli\ler
Paula Wood, Utter Control
•
Edna Clark· · '
Gerald &amp; Mary Powell
Carl Nottingham
Fiancls Hendri~
Gladys Cumings
Rita Smith
PouiOite
Hanilon
&amp;
Clnda
Stan:her
Oina
Pines,
Rio
Gnnde
Colleae
Shirley ~Qiem.Joyce
O'Bryant
Art &amp;.Janelles• '
Harold Lawson
Rcx:ksprinas Fellowship Ctus
Ruth Col"l"'ve, R.N.. Pleaaanl Valley Cudiac Rehab,
Pam Colwell·
Girl Scouts of Mel&amp;• County
· Jeannie Oftitt
Prentice &amp; taro! He~
Harri1onville Elementary School
Rcx:k5prings Rehab. Center
RyU1
MciCiy,
Life
Line
s.
...
ning
Golden
Bello,
Trinity
Chun:h
of
Pomeroy
JoAnnCoriiJ,t , _
J.at;tio Hildebnnd · ,
Lester M. &amp; Carolyn
Harold
Hanson
Rock&amp;prings United Methodist
Hall Kneen, OSU &amp;tension
Sandra Clay, R.N.. PVH Hoopice
Bonnie CoMe
Mill')' Hindy
Ohlinser
Hartwell House
Women
Jocldyn Sheets, Cardiovucular Coordinator,
Rose Corliss'
Tuppen Ploino VFW 1!90'3
Wllljam Oliphant
Marjorie Hoffner .
Helen Swartz
Ruby Morris
Vince Smith, PVH Home Medicall!quipmenl
Paul COtterill ·.,
Meis• County Health llepanmeot
Kenneth &amp; Nancy Hollxook Raymond Oliver
· HJida Collin8
Rutland Elementary School
Wondy Mwon, Pomeroy Library
·ll.aymdnd Cotterill
Jane Staley, PVH Homo Health
Bob Ord
Wilkie Holman
Hill's Citao
Rutland Legion 4f467
Wilovene Boiley
Jarod Vannon, Pltannaclol
Joan Oouncil
Pearl Osborne
Freda Holsinger
Howani Robinson
Eli Denison
Yv011ne Brown, Neurologlcol Depanmen~ PVH
Laura Cozart'
Jason
Kina
&amp;
!IJDOI
Towami&lt;ky,
LPL
Fln111&lt;ial
Mynio Kly Pulcer
Jack &amp;t Elizabeth Hawley
Judy Holtir
Salisbury Elementary School
JoAnq Crisp , .
Jackie Hildebrand
Samuel May
Nellie Parker
Pat Holler
Shaffer Logging
Roy &amp; Pauline Parker
Jean TNssell
Riehud Crow •
Helen Hood
Jeanette Lawrence
Southern L&lt;X.:al S~;hool
Lois Cunniniham '
Son.ia Panoru
Ahce Marie Houdaahelt
Jo
Tyree
Stephanie Mulf
Betty Curfman
Evelana Pauley
Marcia Houdaohelt
AU.. Wolfe
John Williams
Susan Metts ' 8th grade class 111
Pqlly &lt;;IJ(ti!
Garfield Poul•y
Virginia Hoy\
Bob Bror
Motp County EMS
Joyce Bunch
Meigs Middle School
Helen,Diilty . • .
James &amp; Shirley Pauley
Harold Hudnall
MCCoA lleonlaiTnuteM
Motp COIIDI} 1'nlateel 1nd Clortq
Julie
Campbell
Thea
Poulins
Lane ! Dortna Dllllels
Clara Phillips
Gene and Linda Hudson
Brodlord Cbordt o1 Cbrlot
Motp County Health Dept
Justin, Christopher &amp;
Ted &amp; Kethel Hatfield
Roberi Daniels
Sari
Phillips
Sarah Hull
Cbanlll 27· Pete It Brenda 11arn1wt
Melp County TB CUnlc
Amanda Goode
Terry Shain
Olaa Danl&lt;ls
Rev, &amp; Mn~ , Konold Place
Birdie Hysell
Henrw1 Cuoon
Oblo JUIIa.Com
Karolyn Welsh ,
The Dally Sentinel
Leo &amp;Mary Davidson
Alice Plan11
Harold &amp; Dee Hy"ll
Leaf) Cbu....,
l'epolal Chtoblre
Tim Baum
Kathryn H!Ut "
Dorothy Davii · ,
OlaHyoell
Grace Price
Jell Mullli11, AEP, Gtnm1
RSVP Ad.taory Board
Kroa:er cl Kroger Employees
Timoth~ Smith
Elizabeth Davis
George Ingles
Gerald &amp; Klthy Pullins
Tom and Rose Wolfe
Lenora Leifheil
Jom01 M. Gavlll Plant
RSVP YoiUDteen
Pauline Davis
Frances Reed
James Ingles
Leanne Cunningham
Tom's Barber Shop
Jell Sbllk, Pomtror Fin Dept
Soclal Security Admlalotntlon· Athena Oflkt
Willie &amp; Dorothy Davio
Barbara James ,
Golda Reed
lcllie Rayburn
Trinity Church of Pomeroy
Molp County Andltor
The Dally Seodnol
Retha Day
Blltbara Reeves
Linda Haley
US Food Service
Tammy Jarvis
Molp County Cbulber of COIII!!I...
llalted Fu!ld For Melp Countr
Bruce Deeter
V
.E, Hoy1
Dorothy Reibel
Linda
Kine
Roberta Jeffers
Molp Countr c..mlll!ontn a LocaiiState . WYVK
Vaughan's Cardinal Foods
Doris Deeter
Lucille
Butcher
Dorothy Jenkins
Kenneth Rhodes
Etocted Ollldlll
XI Gommo Epallon
Lutchie Riggs
Virgil Miller
Jose' &amp; Maria Delgado
Pauline Ridenour
Curtis Jenkinson
Mtlp
Cowotr
DoptnmtDiof
Mabel
Waddell
Virginia Rowe
Lydia DeLong
Hattie
·
Evelyn !ewell
Job ond Fomlly Smlal
WYVK
Kenneth &amp; Ruth DeLong
Johnson
Eva Johnson
Margaret Johnson
Mildred Johnson
Becky Johnston

APPRECIATION TO:

I·""'~~~~?.,;

4

MARCH FOR MEALS

COM~bAr.te
HOLZER
CLINIC

A WIRED WORLD COM/WiY

www.holzerdlnk:.com

'Dreams
&amp; ~Ftt 6Jftinas ·
Let us be your
Valentine·s Day Gift Center!
*MASSEY FERGUSON'
2002 MF471, 2WO, 1112trana.,
dual remote•. - braktl, 1111
thin 30 hra., lull w1rranty,

Ung~ri~

5.8% •• low u $281 per month.

Oils &amp;.. Lotions

JIM'S FARM

s.,. ~~.A.'ftu-1

EQUIPMENT,
215D EuQm Annue

Spring V1Uey PIIIZII • GaiUpolls

Meigs

Multipurpose Senior Center
112 East Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 722, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992·2161 (740) 992·7886 Fax

O·NATIONS

Mon/My - S.turdlly 1o.m-Bpm

0: II left in the game but it 33 Meigs rebounds with
was too little too late as the Soulsby adding 5. Kayle
Marauders hung on for the Davis grabbed four rebounds
win.
from Page 81
and played tough on the
Meigs was led by Pierce defensive end for Meigs
Standall cut the lead to 34-31 with 23 and Davis with 22 drawing two Nelsonville
at the 6:00 mark to keep the also got five points from charging fouls . Ashley
Buckeyes close. Meigs had Shannon Soulsby with Maria Standall grabbed seven of her
pl'enty left in the tank, as the Drenner, Justine Dowler and teams- 24 rebounds. Meigs
Renee Bailey each scoring committed II turnovers
Buckeyes seemed to start to two
points.
fade physically. Davis and
Ashley Standall scored 13 while the Buckeyes had 15.
Maria Drenner combined to to lead the Buckeyes while
Nelsonville won the JV
give the Marauders a double- Jordan Bateman added II . game coming from behind in
digit lead at 42-32 late in the Whitney Maiden scored 10.
the last minute to grab a 34third quarter.
32
win. Sara Higgins led the
Meigs went 17 of 47 from
:A Pierce three pointer with the field and 16 of 23 at the winners with 16 points, Joey
5:26 left in the game gave foul line. Nelsonville con- Hanning scored 17 to lead
Meigs their higgest advan- nected on 18 of 47 from the Meigs. and Emily Ashley
tage of the night at 47-34. floor and 5 of II at the foul add~d 7 for the Marauders.
The Buckeyes were able to line .
Meigs (5-13) will host
cut the lead to 51-45 with
Davis collected 16 of the Wellston O!l Thursday night.

on

Olympics

Ohio

--4-41-16,_11=--

or441-1414

•
•·

frlildal re
Stainless
Steel APPliances

9.99

8

Now In Stock!

Gallipolis
Chiropractic
.. &amp;- Center

SPECIAL THANKS

Dr. Joey D.
Wt&amp;nA
Full Stry!q

Ftdlltr

Offtdn1:

Diasnostic X-Raysl
• Personal
1--'-;_...JiJ
Rehabil~ation

FURNITURE

COMPANY

•Quality • Selection • Service

304-773-5592

•

• Nutritional Counseling
• Personal injury
• Workers Compensation
• Most Insurance Accepted

.740·441..0200

'

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�~~~~~8~4~·-T~hie~~~Sienit~iniiel~ii~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~·~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;.--.~;;ijiii~~ii~~~:i~~~~~ :.
QI::ri
e tinel - 3L\e
.:
CLASSIFIED
'

t997 Dodge Noon, 2DR,
outomalc, a~. 83,1100 mites,
run• good, $2650 080.
(740)256- 12311 (740~2581875

CLASSIFIEDS!
94 MKsUbloho 'Montero,
SUV. Sunroof, ail auto, 7
eeater, 100,000 i'niln. 4·
wheel drive. Csu ~304)675-

7986

1998 Dodge Neon 4dr. au- :15::-::Bu:-:-bu-rba:-n-2-500-,-4-.4-,
to, ale, 74,1100 mliaa. Red. 454 cubic Inch , automotlc,

•.'

E&gt;&lt;eelient

Condition. $3,800. very

gOod · condition .
(740)379-221 8

aam-epm. (304)875-8325

. PiT Corvette, 28,860 mites,

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285 000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR
NOW ONLINE ,

To

m;rtbune

Place
Ad---

HOW 'IQ WRITE AM AQ

I . ANNOUNCEMENTS
C·1 Beer Carry Out permit

for .sale. Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
of interest to: The Daily
Sentinel. PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
- - - -- - - FARRAGO
Now accepting your
Spring/Summer clothing 1or
consignment.
Cali .(304)675-1059
Farrago ~sate"
Pnoes reduced on all winter
Clothing as low as .50¢ per
ite m. 304·675· 1059

r

GIVEAWAY
L,~-------,.1
Adorable Lab/ Collie Mix
puppies, born Chri stmas
Day. Black &amp; tan. (740)4411138

Free puppies, call (740)9929229

To go homes only· I male
Collie &amp; Lab dog, 1 female
Pit Bull &amp; Cockerspaniei
mix, 1 male cat, call
(7401992· 1909

Lost Ame rican Bulldog, 4
mon . male, about 60 lbs.
White w/ Black spots . last
seen on 1·26.03 At 62 area.
$250 .00 reward for safe return 304-675-5653
Lost· Boxer, 6 mos. male,

Hru&gt;WANJW

1:00

Ir'

6
Hru&gt;WANIID

1'1'::11'""..;;..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
1tO

HELP WANffiO

r

Profeaalonal
Poeltlona
Gallipolis Developmental
Center, an ICF/MR, is re·
cruiling providers tor proles·
sional services to residents
to r the period 07/01/2003·
06/30/2005. The areas of
profe ssional services are:
•Phychiatrist
-Guardlnshlp
•Language Development
Specialist
(Speech and Audiology)

work well with others as a
part of a team. Please send
Vi
1
resume to:
nton 9 aptst
Church, Attn: Board of
Trustees, P.O. Bo)( 38, Vln·
ton, OH 45686 . Must be re·
ceived by February 5, 2000 .

Bo:=-x=4~3·=M-:id-:d::-ie-po_rt_._o_h

45760

111

IMMED ATE OPE
I
NINGS
Local Office Has . 25·50
Openings. No experience
Needed, $6·$9 Per Hour, 1~
888-974-JOBS
--- -LPN
LOOKING
. FOR
Monday- Friday. no week·
ends or Holidays. Apply in
' R
person , 936 State oute
_160_,1_7_40-'-)44
_ 6·_9_
62_o_ _ _
MODELS
Children 2 years old thru

- - - - - -- Ann : We need help, $1200·
$5000/mo · 1· 666 · 736•7794
www.heartofthegarden.com
Avon
Representati ves
want0&lt;1. (740)446-3358
AVON! Ail Areas! To Buy or
Sell . Shirley Spears, 304·

_67_5_-1_4~29_·-----,--_

~::.:.~~or $250 ~oin~~~
potential. Local posilions
1·800·293·3985 ext. 4060.

Due t~ Recent
Growth

r(7;;;40;;;)44;;;;;1;;;-8;;;8~17:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~

AllrwiRIIDitdvertl•lng
In thla newapapw Ia
Mibfllcl: to th• Fedenll
'llir Houolng Act of 18H
which malcn h lilogot to
odvlfiiN "o-

1

•• ,

diKrlmlnltlon baed on
race, colot,rellglon,Mx
fll ltllll ·-.tl
I
m
•-u• or ·-• ona
orlgl'::~ce"':.~~n=~=on to

INsntUC110N

U /

nANTED

---'IiiiioiriiDoiiio-_.1 ,

1..

Thlo _,.por will not
knowlnfi IICC~t
lld~ntl! ror rql
H1ot• ~1
"" chI ' In
violation Dfthlltw. OUr
,_,.oro_,
lntonned that Ill
dwelling• MlvertiHd In
thlonowo-rore
ovolloblo on on oquol

POSITIONS
AYAILABI,E
• Sales Consultant
• Parts Department
Coum er Sales
• Parts Department
Deli•ery
• Oil &amp; Lube
Tech nician

Se11d Resume to

Ri ver
· lrpuli,, Ohio 456 3

195 Upper

The Best Products.
The Best BeneOts.
The Best Work
nvironment.
.__•:_
_ _ _ __,

g~~; ~t~s~~~-· ~a~t~o~:

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·--lililiillili;.,.,J

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2 three drawer chest. one AKC, 7 month old Male
VCR chest; $6G each for Bll Dachshund,- housebroken,
of them, (740)992·1909
all shots, ·$200; no-checks.
,2s.; 'RCACoiOrCoi1~ol8~hti f40)38B-9824· • .
oso'2
Fl t $100 (304)675 f
1J ,.E h
14x80 trai ler, 3 ~room, 2 .
.
.; 1·~o e.
.
. Sor e:ale· . ~Q. .
nglis
bath, nice yard, porch, stor- twin Rivers Tower Is ac· .
.
heepdog, pups, first shots
age building, central air, cepdng app!lcatiOnl ; ' tor Brand new. Aad)o Shack &amp; wormed, lovable, $200
Porter
area, close
to .,,.
~oapl- . wa'll·n
Hu·d-su
' b._ kara.oke machine (only use ~ach, call 1740)965·9823
tal
$400
&amp;. $400
1 g 11 s1 1or
.

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roll SAUl

1978 Fold F·l60, 4 whoOI
drive. new motor. lransmisslon tranl f•r caee, good
body, $1000. ~740)388·

0436

5-spoed, air, tin,
high
miles,
(740)441 «43

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AP~

c6mr~act

I

Superior Home Maintenance. We do all repajrs on
homoa. Carpentry. plumbIng, Uoors, water tanks.
(740)441-0113

Restaurant
Management
Positions

runo

good,
$1000.

1988 Dodge Ram Charger,
4x4. full oln, auto, lots of
now parts, driven dolly,
(740)9112-ll822
2001 JHP Cheroktt Ctu·

ole 4 whelf dr.,3,400 milea
like new 117,500.
304·882-3333
2002 ExtendOd Clb Dero'
max Dually Olen! 3800 LT.
Absolutely loaded. 8,800
miieo. $38,1100. (304)8753012 onyllmo.
88 Chevy 1500 4x4, 340, 5
sp, high milaa, $2500 OliO,
(740)742-4011
88 Chavy 1500 4d, 340, 5
sp, ~lgh milu, $2500 080.

Send resumes along with salaries
expected by Feb. 21 ,2003 to
Horace Karr
34671 T.R. 382
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(740)7~2-4011

Homes From $199/Mo., 4% : :.
Down, 30 Years at 8.5%
APR. For Ustings, 6Q0-319 3323 Ext. 1709.

Moo~s~

·

--...-----1 BR House In Racine, with
water, sewer, trash $325.
Mont~. No Pets (740)992·
·
5039 ~
3 br. house at 2105 )'lorth
Main si. nopets,$425.00+
dep. 304 _675 _2749

I

3br. House located In Ma-

wv

U 1111

$495

;;;,nPets, .(304)7i'3~~1 t es.
Clean warm 2 bedroom
homo in Pomeroy, w/opUon·
to buy, $400 a mo., good
references, (740)698-7244
One bedroom house in BidWill With &lt;efrigerator &amp;
stove. Gas heat with new
carpet. For more lnlorrnatlon, please call Sharon &amp;
Scon Howell at (740)3889241
-------Smail 1 bedroom home in
Middl
$300 p1

eport,

·

US

de~

posit 8. references required,
17401992-11 154

to(;4;:):6.~1~4 2 bed-

rlb ,· ··.· AtfiQ,.
~ed : tu~nlture store.··.~ 3~·- ~OS~,~AN~"t;J!!TeAPAis.:.'' foR§H.! . .

I

·~

ES
1 onn . ., .
,_•
, Jackson
, • o~
,.~. "'VoUV""
• .''If~ • ,~ ,y •
.
~
Fumlshed 3 rooms+ bath, tres..a. bUnk beds, ~rosa- 537·9528
$500 PQLII&gt;~dMPOUNDIII • ·.
t I
1
t
'
.
ups a rs, c ean, no Pi a. ers, 1couches, appltanoes. ~
ftV..; . I
Hondae, ~~&amp;..~tel Cars/ ~
Reference &amp; d~poait re· bedroom suites, recliners.'
·
P'JU..UJ~.~ •
TruckSI ..~1"0111 $5QO.
For .,.
quired. (140)446.·1519
GraYe ·
monuments.
.
: . , , JLallnge; ~~·;:'J9-3001 e~ . 7,,
3901 .,· 1 ~.~.\.i
Furnished amat11 bedroom (740)448·4782 GallfPQIII,
-. ...t
·
••
". .
...,.
,.
OH
10 &amp; 1o wide ~•hlo ya"'
· 11
apt. Close to PVH and
·
·,; ·
"'
\1'"1"'1'
"'!(
: ·
"~
shopping. No Pets, No .
t .
. ,·.bulldl~&amp;~ avadpbl.e In g 1984 phe.w , ~10 ,~xtended
Smol&lt;ero. $270. + etectric.
. ANil.QIJEl · '
l,~ru
me!ai elde .&amp; roof, qab 4)\4, ~,ij, ~speed, ale, r.
Referenceo. $200. DeP&lt;ion.··
6M68 .·;~1f\l rQii·~ , door; good, qonqlti9o, $1800. "'
(304~e7s- 285 i
. 1 ••
, • ,40•64~1~ shop building, 1: Bam~IJI , 1304)6.75-6325.
,
Buy or•.;,~eu. Rlvertn- .A.ntl- 3 entry,_ 3~12x12, Q_verh.ead.a 1990~ 0tds C+etra, 4 cylln- , ..
Garage apartment for rant, qu&amp;l\ 1124 East Main on gutterLpal~ted ~eekalda~ &amp; ·der, auto, ·runi .. 'QOOd; 1988• .."
2 bedroom, stove, n;ttrlgera· SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 1,.0.. roof, in&amp;l,f!ated root, erected Plymo-uth V8h, , 8. sytlndar ·r
1
lor furnished . Water palq, 992-2528. Russ Moore, price . .; • , $20, 106.0~; auto ,Qood oonlli11on, low ~.
$275 month, $150 deposit. owner:
. ~x40x94 gar~r~. e ~ ~.·10&gt;i8 ··miles. ' Ca:llll (304f675·561'2 ., _
(740)446-9061 .
.. --~----- . lnaul .pyerhe(\d~. 1·3' !f\try:~ pr (304)675·58ia
· t~
Victorian was~ bowl &amp; p~Ch· Insulated (\)91 gull''· lj'
IQ ·t , ,
,.
Gberdaclous _llvlrtmng. 1, andVI21 . er - ~(lroQstone
Eri~liqd over~ '. p8Jiiled . 'st88 1994 .~If , ~~~gatafl poW·
· room ape anto at
- 1890), $325, (740)992,0274 aidae '&amp; . roo( ' erebtad; or, alt, t iK,', eluis~. amitm. ~·
0
10,15,tpo'; 24 x4~x9'f. ~a- i:aosejte:, /~ii;@ miles,
loge Manor and Riverside
·~·
Aportmanls in Middleport.
rage, 1-S•
In· great eondltiqn. ask!ng ••
::~ ~:~qu~i C~~U~~g
SUi o•eiheads, !Mut '~f, : $3,00p';' qo)jl92!6oe4 ' ·'i
, i
painted ste~ sides· &amp; roof 1' 1997 C'l'J81Jer 20 tlutomat~ ..
OpponuniUaa.
'
1 Northman snow blade;·2 overhang · gutter, erOI:ted
$2496;, 1
Gnond
Modem 1 bedroom apart- gravity wagons, (two. hun~ price $9967.00; . fracislan ,20, $3495. Thre8 1.99"5 ~·
mont (740)446-()390
dred bushol). Please call Pool frame Bldrs,.f4lf.74Z- . Orand AIJlS. ·.17 others in
(740)245-5788 lor more in· 4011 . 1 -800-396-30~6 -'. ' ~lock. ,WI),~ ·. lltOTORS "'
Now Taking Applications- formation .
.
(740)~!'0103
f
35 West 2 Bedroom Town- ---:-----~ ' lliock: bril:k, ' oewa'r pipes, ..
.
' '
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\y
'
..
house Apartments, Includes 10x5 utili
trailer, 4 foot windows, lh'ltels, ~tc.. C1a~de. Q6 Ctitiv{ Luml,yi, 39,000 .~Water
Sewage, Trash, tald·down ramp gate, $1t5o. '(Jintel'!l, Ala Gran~«. O,H actual fuJies, ' '6it:e $5000 '
$360/Mo., 740-446-ooo8.
(740)742-2780
Caii740-~4?'512L .
.· firm . (749~,3~)1047,'.
· ;
Bulavli~· Pike. We salt mtt·

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Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

TFN

High&amp; Dry

SeD-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

February 8th
6:30pm
1st pack $10.00
After that $5.00 each
Starburst $1850

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday &amp;

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
ol every month
All pack. $5.00
Bring thili coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Gtt5FREE

Sweetheart Dance
February 8th
7 pm- 11 pm
Free food will be served!
The band will be
County Road 5

7~0 East Stat~ Street

Phon~

(740)593-6671

740-992-5232

Alhens, Ohio
LiA Beffer W. Eve Da iJ

PC DOCTOR

JOlES'

Tree Service

k

Sunday

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

We Mokl Hou" Colli

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

(304) 675·5282
www.wvpcctr.com

rOwv

r.com

MANLEYS
HARTWELL
SELF STORACE

Mary's Grill

97 Beech st.
middleport, oH

at
Riverside Golf Club

[lrxlO' 61D'x20']

(140) 992-3194

992-6635

BISSEll
BUILDERS IDC.

STORAGE
10x10
10x20

Ripley, WV 25271

740·992-1717

1-800-822-0417

St. Rt. 7GoeaJeln Rd.
Pomeroy

Dean JD1I
New&amp;Uied
South Church St.

·w.vs Ill Chevy. Pontiac, Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

Best Se111ice at
the Best Price

"llostmyahlrt
Inthe stock
market!"

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement

Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

"Not mel

Windows •

.-e.

r"10

Cellular

1f«,~~

Rib· Eye Dinner with
salad and baked potato
$10.99
Friday, Feb. 7
Starting at 5 p.m.

An EqUIII OfiiJDitunlly Etrtployw

.ALl' iii.

(740) 992·2222 or
(740) 446-1018

AMERICAN LEGION
MIDDLEPORT

A New Full Service Restaurant
Located in Pomeroy, Ohio is
Now Taking Applications for:
Kitchen Management · ·
Executive Chef
Dining Room Manager

~.available. ~-~~C¥1f:,. ~ng

·-

For more information,
CBII&lt;GBIIia MBIQS
Community Action ·
Agency

•t"ior-IMPRO--:H'!'~-.--;..,1

2001 F·260, Superduty, XL
package, 4ll4, 5.4 V-6, tow 4011
package, 29,000 miles ..
AJC, cruls&amp;, un, $18 ,500.
(740)379-2757

1984 8-10 Blazer. 4x4, V8,

.

You could be
eligible for FREE
help getting
back to worlc

I

'

llpoUs. Call (740)446·4514 avatlable in Syracuse .$200. $400 w'rii take $300 hunting stock, Champ1on
• bloodii
Bo " · d Ott rta'l ·
day or (740)446--3248 night depOsit $330. per month. (740)992·9579
'
ne. X118!
e ! ),,
for more Information.
Aen.11rwludea Water, Sewer
,,
·
. .. ..
'$150. (740)643·2288 Ready
&amp; 'n'ash, No Pets, ap~iica- BURN Fat, BLOCK Crav-· nowi
2 bedroom mobile home, . liar\,. Reference &amp; SufUolent ln~s, apd Ji()OST Energy
,
1
I \In I -.. t 1'1'1 II '
Spring Valley area. Extra 1 • e to Qualify 74 ~ 378 ~ Uke You Have Never Ex·
.~ o :t
,\ 11 \ l '- l~)tl,
nice, all electric. $350 a 11 ·
~ ,.
perlencec:h
)J.:"
month, $250. deposit. Call
·
WEIGHT- LOSS
lllill'""-"":':"""_..;.-;.,
(740)441 -6954 or (304)675SPACE
. .. .
REVOLUTION
FARM
·
lilJK
JbNr
;
,o
t.~ew
prod!JCf
lal!f!Ch
Octo·
~
F.ol.iiPMENT
:~
2900
bar 23, 2002. Call Tracy at
-~ .
,.,
3 bedroom mobile home for t.to6ile home space f(\r rent (740)441-1982
Four Wheeler; 2000 Honda ·:·
rent, no pets, (740)992- · in ·Middleport,
p~r
fl
$2 . F
1
5858
Oirilrlg rOom suitS &amp; hutCh, aeon, 000. arm tractor,· •
·
mont~. (740)992·3194
very good condition, $200, ~000 Ford, $4000. Cali ' ·
Beautiful River View Ideal
174o)94g_2 159
~740)256-6663
. ., .
•.,
For 1 0 r 2 People, Referen· Trailer space lor rent. $125 . .
.
ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos· j&gt;er month, plus deposit. GrUbt&gt;'s· Piano· Tuning &amp; 1~684; Di&amp;SSI; ROPS, with
ter Trailer Park. 740·441· Priest's Trailer Park. Wat,r · tl3epilr8. P_r"obiQI'I)s? Need C:anopy, 8F·4R ttans.,· dual
0181 .
Paid. Call (740)446-3644
T~~~}6-4Ca211 }h~ Piano Dr. iomotes, runs &amp; looks good.
;_7•:.:~c.:..::..;:5=o---- $9,500. (740),a7B·2757
• •!~
1 ' r10; I
Jacqueline's "Uvln' Dolls" 'John Deere
Tree· ':···
.. '-- ~ 1
u..._. .....,....,... ... . Presenting Apple Valley tPrs. Financing as
~
UUU!J01UUI·:
low as '&gt;,
·
Goof~;
Dolls &amp; Kits. Custom made 4 _5% and O% down wilh
1 e.nd 2 bedroom apart·
babies &amp; toddlers for that ~ohn Deere Credi1 Approments fumr·shed end unfur
11
k
'
•
BeaUtiful overstuHe'd Sofa spec a someone, or ma e -val. Carmichael Equipment,
nlahed, security deposit re· f
your own, your. way! Many ·lne. ,. ·Huntinn"'-n-,
WV ,
qulred, no pets, 740·992· rom Topes, light gray with
11..\...
1
dusty rose paHern. ·' $350. ta:ces, eve _d)JOrs, halr color · (3o4)736·21'~0. GallipoliS •·
2218 ,
~ ··
~· · -·· .,_,. · (1,4:0)B88..g9'6 afler-~.7 : •· ·:O:i!i:l~s~lnc~:!!'tr~~ · O_H :{7.~~2-~ ·~::--!. ~,~

riO

r

, .•

lrevou
Laid on;a

1998 Yamaha Kodiak, 4 ' : ' : ' : - : - - : - - - wheel drlvs, good condKion, C&amp;C General Horne Malnte$2900 080, (740)992-o512 nence- Painting, vinyl old·
ing, carpentry, doors, win·
BoATS &amp; Moroas dowa. bothe. mobile homo
roll SAUl
rapalr and more. For free
..__llliiiiiiiiiii-_.1 estimate call Chtt, 74o.-992·
•
94 Stratoa, 17'6' be.. boat, 8323.
blOck &amp; oliver with white bot· - - - - - - - 10m, gray carpet, 120 hp. Custom BUilding &amp; RernodEvlnrude trolling motor, re- oiing fo1 ail your homo rebuilt lalt year from lack of pair needs, In the buslneee
u11. runa greal, looks groal, lor over 18 yoa111, (740)9112$7500 080.. (740)742- 1119

!'

~pos· . alz'*" 1 br apartment ~~~ 2 tlm,s), ple.ya CO's, has 2 :full grown Callfoniian n~bit. You pay all utilities, no ·· · 'til"' • '
'
· ta
d k i:h
k
&amp; Ill.,
)
33
pets. Applications available 87ar679 EHO
pitpche ·. ec m"'icropaho
ngn"es e&amp;y
01ts, {74Q ~5·38
4
0 lab
io' AKC p
1403 Eastern Avenue, Gal· Two • 2 BR apartments splitter, large speaker, paid ·
pupp s,
· ro~en

e

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondllion 1 l"etl
antea. Local1 references
rur" me guarnished. Eotabllohed 1975.
Call 24 Hra. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
WatorproolinQ.

~

mo

•

jid ·IMPioVFMENrS
HoME

Front line management position with accoun18.bility for the daily functioning of surgical services.
Must hold a current licensure in West Virginia.
Bachelor's degree in 'Nursing (BSN) preferred.
A minimum of 3-5 years experience in Surgical
Services preferred.
For more infonnation:
Pleasanl Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
AAIEOE
(304) 675-4340

::9968:::--::--:--:-:-::-:--

'I'Rua!s

~

II I '

.. ·

heat pump, · private
1 bedroom apartment. kltch· Bedroom suit. beds, drop Clott:llng . .•atao
Pas;· _,
porches, very reasonably en, BR, LA, B.ath, $275
Comn•re td Middleton ·•nd ,
~nO\ Hay ~ pields. ATY f
"""ed 1
II H rtford 304 17 0)3 7 70
N
leaf table &amp; chairs, recliners,
~
... ~
o se
a
•
4 6 - 15. o pets.
,
My Twirlh, Cuddly - B,a bio•· ~~~r,,• 12 vo~. ,1
882-2389
roll-a-away bed, hospital Call for more ·irlf-atl~:· High ouauty: 911 most ATV, •
1" Bedroom Apartments bed97
.42' microwave . . (7~0)~68810 . ¥.1~'-' . ··, $295~ 'Jitni~. -~fliifin. EQu\pA .,
Traitor for sale with. lot, Starting eif$289/nio, waSh·
•
_
ment, 17401
_':) 484
14x80, very good cond. erl Dryer Hookup, Stove For ·Sate· Reconditlorte,.
JET .
' ~ ·
-.Q·
haat pump, PJivate lot, and Refrigerator. (740)441· .- ·
1 ,
•\
AERATION MOTORS
·· ' ;.;~
.
.
o{;,,,.~.~n.
wastters, dryers ana refrlg ·
1519 .
porches, very reasonably
erat6rS.' Thompsons 'APpll· ·· Repued, New &amp;-..Rebuilt ln
· ' .; ' · · ·
l ;·'
r.
priced to" sell Hartford 304· 1 or 2' BA App~. lor Rent.
ance: 3407 Jackson·' AV~- Stock. Call Ron Evana, 1'"
0
88 2 2 38 9
537 9528
ij
jji~";;;;~--~:--., UtiiKies Pd., No Pets
nue, (304)875·7388. '
· · 6 oo·
50-60~ ShtWits:' ' (740)949- ; ;
LOis &amp;
992·5858
.
. 2908 'or '~t40) 949-2017
"
Good Used Applianceo. Re'
·
; · .
•
ACRFAGE
New .&amp; U;;.ed Heat ~u~ps· .
.
.
·, ·,·
..,_ _oiiiiiiiiiio-,.1 2 bedrooms- 6 month lease conditioned and Guaran~ Gas Furnaces.. Free Esti· Boardi"g, ;rramlng, C~ndi~ ...
Garage Apartment, uttlltles teed.. Washers, Dryers, inates. (740) 44 6-6308 , 1
tionlng. ·Jndoor and Outdoor· ,
Mason Co. 17 miles from paid, .no pets, no .parties. Ranges, and Refrigera~rs,
·
·.
·rldintt, lacllllles,l tralls and
Mi"
xi of 1-64
At 2
•
non e I
near.
$560 mont~ plus $5ro de- Som~ start at $95. Skaggs NEW·· Af&lt;IP-, U~ED STI[EL··;wash be~.. t.,H0·446-4710 f.~
w/city waler, large lots lor poait. (74!!)446-0241
· AppUanc.es. 78 Vine . ~1 .. . ~teal. Qeams, . Pipe F,lebar H
nib"'' ' to''butcher. Cali f"
Double &amp; single Wide mq-.
(740)446-7396
..
, ,For Co""'ete, ·Angie, Chan· · og ; e.'~!l· .
.·,
1.,
bile home, Vinyl siding &amp; 3 bedroom, bath, washer/
.
, I Fl 0 t aa·r St 1 G tl ' any rrr~. eave messagtt.
dryer ~ookup, no P&lt;its, Cen· Moiidhori ·carpet 2o2· Clark ' ne '
ee
ra pg · j740)2~6-16~~ ::
· ' ' '" "
'
shingle roof only. Owner II· tenary Road. Call (740)446~ Chap"ef 1Road. P~rter,' Ohlb .. For Oralpf!, . Drlyewavs &amp;
' . :.
..
. . c.onancing w/down payment. 9395 after 5pm. .
(740)44!1-744~ 1·B77-sso- Walkways.' ~&amp;L Scrap Met· Holste1n·l'in·uUI 'Crose Bred "'
$22,000, (304)562· 5840
.
9162 . ·Ft8e EatlmateS,·Eltsy als Open Mo~ay, Tuesday,. beltet'ltlln'd bulls; '(740)245· ~· ·
4 rooms .and Hath, stove/ re· flnandng
- ' 90 days same 86 · Wedneiday &amp;.
Sam· . 9557 ~: w , &lt; ·, ·.
V,' ·
Patriot area , 20+ wooded f rIgerator. Ut li'ti
'
•,.~
I es pa id• , cash. Visa/
Master ·card. 4·30pm
..
.. ClOSe"
. , J:"acres, county water &amp; alec· $400 ·month .· 46 Olive OlivB· 8_, little save alot.
~aturday · &amp; ·
~tt~;
1
lric available, homesite. Street. (740)446·3945
..
~740)446-7;!,00
•.
Borders Wayne National
. New sofa &amp; Chair, $399. I
.
~.
Forrest, excellent hunting, BEAUTIFUL
APART- !b: 12 carpet, room elze $50. PROM gown_s; s~v~n d_.-,ssuot
$38,000 17401379•9141
MENTS AT BUDGET PRI· Mollohan Carpet&amp; Furniture es: 2 plete, sequ,l~. bo~nant
CES AT JACKSON ES- 174014*7444 . Clark Chap· styles, srzes ·,Jr..· 7-~.
;:
TATES, 52 Westwopd Drive .el Aottd Porter OH.
med/taij. , ~ _. _.' ., · Rc:tfSy.~a6fy'
-:from $297 to $383. Walk to
'
'
P,ricad, (740~9~38~ ·
'"II~-~----,
shop &amp; movies: Call 740· Paul ~-~nyan bedroom &amp;uitiJ, Waterline' speCiai:'; 3/4 200
llousl!s
446-2568. EQual Housing dresser, night table, q~~n PSI $21 .00 P.ftr ,1,oq; 1• ~00
~:
..__llliiFORiiiiitiillEM'iiiitiiio-pl Opportunity.
size bad, mattress, Bfl~e~ PSI $35.00· Per , 100i All
..,
·
springs $600 (74())446
1 ·3 Bedroom&amp; Foreclosed Downtown Gallipolis, apart08 . .
.
• Brass Compr~k)n. Fittings
i,''

bui~

~;~~~~~~=~h7~;o::~~

AKC Boxer pups, 7 weeks ,_.
old shots current, Brindle with beautiful markings. ··.
(740)379-2639

2 RailrOad Lanterns, 1 'cx)i:il
miners dinner bucket. Waterloo Wonder book, call
(140)446-6293

::

•
Childcare available in doWn- ~!op~port~u~nlly~b~o~H~·~
·~
town Pomeroy, private pay -

o

Tara Townhouse Apart·
met:~ts. Very Spacious, 2
Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA, 1
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
tlo,&lt;Start $385/Mo. No Pets,
Lease Plus Security Deposit
Required, Days: 74b~446~
3481; 'Evenings: 740:.367·

11

dloorlminotlon."

I

lot,~

14x10, 2 bedroom. total
electric, $300 a month,
$150 deposit, no pets,
(140)742-2714
--:------14x80 trai ler located at
Glenwood, stove, refridg ., ·
microwave furnished 304·
576·9991.

,.1

pr'lference, llmltdon or

Jennifer Hoback
7411-9411-2169
Congratulatlonal You have
won 2 free movie tickets to
t"•• e 5 pnng
. VaIIey 7 .Ga11·lpo·
lis. Call the Sentinel for de·
::t•z;iisro.,l;l7.;;40~)~99~2;.;-2;.;1;;;55:~,)_ _,

r186

lr I~= J.r ~ It.._·."riiioTiiiiALEiii·_..1 i~

j

.,..,...,.oe,llmhltlon or

§j_..,;iiiiiiiiliiiiiii1110..,1
SCIIooui

1252

I ~\

Public Notice•

InN~;::';·~::.:
Your Rlabt to KnoW. Delivered Right 10 Your

FREE ESTIMATES

(7'4oJ44e

--

Per month . (304)552-5840
$20 · Hour. CaII Natnon
•- Voil· New home- 4 bedroom, 2
mer (304)674-0023
balh, livingroom, lamiiy·
room , dining room ~en,
extlt406
Georges. Portable Sawmill, modern kitchen, 2 car ga~
www.hlghlite.com/Hunt
don~ haul your logs to the rage, hp, all electric, within
iii .i i
t ca
t
Po merov
MRJDDAdvocate
ii
i IIi304
i i-u•75
lu
~ 1957
s
.
waiki ng di sanca
Golf Course 3 acres
Protective services r8pr&amp;·
•
'
sentative position, full-time,
$118,000 ,
call
Susan
in the Gallipolis office. r10
~
(740)985-·291. work 740Bac~eior's degreeinhuman
OProlmJNrry
_446_·72_87_._ _ _ _ _
services or reialed field and '--lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiil_.l p
eKperience In mental retarINOTICEI
omeroy, spacious, 3 bed·
dation required . Send tax OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· room , 1 bath, large lot.
resume to:
$22,500. Discount for cash.
Mary Helen Swan
lNG co. recommends t~et (304~837·7507 (740)709·
Advocacy &amp; Protective
you do business with people 0064---- - - - Services. Inc.
~~n~~~~~:~~ ~h~T~~~~~~~t~ Rental house for sale local·
ed at 1410 Lewis St Pt.
411 Nort~ Hig~ Str et
1st floor
e
you have investigated the Pleasant Make offer
call
.offaring.
'
Columbus, OH 43214
after 6pm. 304-727-3318
614 262 9752
1 )
"
Stick
in 1998, 3 bed~
room , 3 bath fireplace, over
REGISTERED
1 acre, asking $104,900.
SONOGRAPHER
SecondCnanceFinanciai.
(740)98J.0730
Abdominal Sonogrepr.er, Looking for a Second l'llllr'~~-"::'--.,
registered or registry eligible
•
tor a lull-time or part-tims We can help. Good or bad ~
position, in an outpatient di·
credit acceptsd. Cali toil 1988 14•70 3 bedroom, on
agnostic center. Excellent F
1-866 578 4685 F 1
,.
salary (negotiable.) Fringe ree .
•
•
o- rented lot In Camp Conley,
benefits include Holiday &amp; law the prompts.
WV, $7,500' Owner tlnancvacation Pay, 4" 1K pro~
log
with $3.000 down .
gram and Health Insurance.
~~nL.Ut
, (740)245·5671
Hours are Monday thru Fri·
1989 Clayton Westwlnd.
day. with no after hours call.
TURNED DOWN ON
Send resume to CLA 571. SOCIAL SECURITY .ISSI? 2BR, W/D ~ookup, range,
rafrigerator &amp; electric furclo Gallipolis Dally Tribuna,
No Fee Unless We Win I
P.O. Box 469 . Gallipolis,
nace. Located on a rented
1-BBB-562-3345
lot a 641 Lake Dr., Rio
OH 45631.
Rl \ l l '- l \11
Grande, 7 minutes walk to
Sales Manager· Local cellu· l!!llr--o::~
campus. $10,000 080.
lar Telephone Company
HOMFS
(61 4)214·5 15f .
needs e sales manager to
FOR SAI.E
co11er the Portsmoutlv' Gal·
1995 Norris Mobile Home
lipot1s area. Previous sales 4 bedroom Brick Home in like New. 16K76, 2br. Apexperience a must. Please the country on 4-acre lot. pliances. 3 ton haat pump,
8x10 wooden storage bid.
lax resume to ( 740~353· (740)379-2862 ,
2913
(304)675·5727

EO~;,';;

·"

t_MOBILEoiirolliiioiiDrriiHiiiOMEli_
....

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
for Immediate possession
all within 15 min. of down·
town Gallipolis. Rates as
low as 6% . (740)446-3218.

adults of all ages. For local
and national Catalogs, com- only, pro'liding 24 hr. SBIV· Hurricane 3br. 2ba Brick
merciats, TV. No experience ice, call (740)992-5827 for and Vinyl, Mid Entry w/plennecessary. Selections at
more information.
ty of storage. , car garage,
large lot. Owner will finance
riers/sorters. No exp. re· 5pm. OR 7pm on Thur Feb. - - - - - - - - with $20,000 down, $800.

~~:~~- :nedn~~~tn~oi~~~~~~~ ~t~~-at

'

I

"'-------,.1

·~
~,y,

79,000
original
miles.
$2260. (7.0)446-7730

~~~: ca~p;n~~~~~So2~.pm·

Radisson Hotel,
t1on call (630)393~3032 Ext. t .:ngton, W·V· I· 64E ' EK:t, #8
762 . 6am-8pm. 7 days.
OR i-64W. Exit 0*11. Mod·
eIs Net (570)558·7925

,...'

~

17401446 3384

1
·-------'
AITN: Point Pleasant.
Postal positions. Clerks/car-

.-·.

~l•tlon•

2001 14K80 · Oakwood, 3
BR, 2· bath , all appliances
included. We'll make down
payment, you take over
payments of $370 month, or
buy for $22,000. (216)351·
1 acre, riverfront, brick and 7086 or (216)257·1485.
vinyl, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, 2
fireplaces, hardwood floors, Blowout sate on all Single
approximately 2000 sq.ft . Section homes save thou Full basement, $160,000. sands good until February
(740)446.()538
29. (740)446·3093
. Bedroom newly remod- •oet Your Money's Worth~
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, All servlc~s required are 3
P.O. Box 469. Gallipolis, part·tlme/ intermittent. Inter- eled , in Middleport, call Tom at Coles Mobile Homes, St.
Anderson after 5 p.m.
OH 45631 .
ested persons/ parties
Rt. 50 East of Athens. Deliv·
should submit a letter of in· 992-3348
aries, set-ups, eKCavatlng,
EASY WORKI EXCELLENT
PAY! Assemble Products at tent, together with appropri· 3 bedroom, 1 balh, 2 story foundations, sewage svs ate license, certification or
·
tams, driveways, heating
Home. Call Toll Free 1-800· other credential information, home in Pomeroy, good
467·5566 Ext. 12170
and salary requirements or condition,
tireplace, :~~ ~~~i~~.a~~~gs:~:a~~
(740)9112-9492
cept nothi ng tess. Since
Foatar Clrt! glvera Need· fee schedule to: ·
ed, Become a therapeutic
Human Resources Dept.
3 bedroom, single bath, 1967 we are Cole's Mobile
foster care giver. You will be
2500 Ohio Avenue
large family room, fireplace, Homes where you NGet
Reimburse $30·$45 a day
Gallipolis, OH 45631
large living room, complete Your Money's Worth."
lor the care ol child in your Phone No: (740)446-1642 new kitchen. utility room, 2
home. Training will begin
Fax No: (740)446-1341
car garage unattached, 10 ~~ Ho~e Packages avail·
January. For more informs·
TDD:.(740)446-2958
mites South Gallipolis, in
•.
~
y.our
area,
lion call Oasis Therapeutic - - - - - - - - Eurtka, close to Locks &amp;
Care givers Network, Alba· Truck Drlvert, Immediate Dam. Phone (740)256·6949
ny, Oh, toll free 1 ~677-325- hire, claSs A COL reQuired,
(740)256~ 1243 Serious In· New 14x70, 3 br/2bth, Only
quires
Only.
$995 down and only
1556
$197.62 per month, Call
excellent pay, experience
Help wanted caring for the reQu Ire d · Earn up I0 3 bedroom· 1-112 bath, Nikki 7'40·385·7671
elderly, Darst Group Home, $1 ,000. per week.Call 304· w/new 30x30 addition. Lonow paying minimum wage, 675·4005
cated on 12 acres with New 2003 Doublewlde. 'a
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am·
stocked pond. City Schools, BR &amp; 2 Bat~. Only $1695
Vinton Baptist Church is
down and &amp;295/mo. 1 ~8001
8901
currently seeking to erT!ploy (740)446·
691-6m
a General Secretary/ Re· 4
BEDROOM
HOME
Housekeeper/ babysitter, ceptionist on a part-time Foreclosure, only $14,900, Nice lots available for up to
with 9)(perience, organized basis. The minimum re- Won't last. 1·800·719·3001 16xBO mobile hofl)8s, $115
lemale with own transport•· quirements will be that ol a Ext F144
water inC'"ded (7•n)992
•
ru
'
'9U
•
2167
lion. 2:30..4:30pm M·F, high school diploma. Experi·
$10.00 per hour. (304)675 - ence is a plus. Successful Brick .Aanch , 2 bedroom, 2 - - - - - - - 4792 evenings.
candidate will need to be bath, garage, on river, 5 Trailer for S@le with lot,
_ _ __..:.:_____ pleaSant;-polile, and able to miles south of Gallip"olis . 14K80, very ·:good · COnd.
Bookkeeper/ Accounts Payable position. Point Pleasant area. Past e)(perience
wit h accounts payable
needed. Fax resumes to
(304)523-07 14.
-------Construction
Company
needs one or two experianced workers with building
trades skills. Send resumes
outlini ng experience and
refe rences to CL.A 570, c/o

:-

,,

F:;)

Hyundal Accent GT,
Mrnnn~~au to , a1r, eunroo,f
"-"•~•......:.:~~
73·000 mllee, liking $2450, '
~7401992·2982
1988 Yamaha Blaster 4
· 98 ptlrysier Cirrus LXI, wheeler, run• &amp; looks good,
57,1100 miles, $5250 080. rebuilt motor &amp; stainiasa
(740)2~-1618 (740)256· Fm~ pipe, $1100, (740)992·
'96

1988 Fold Bronco II, automatic, new rims, new tlrea,

Ito ~~ I M':':~OMfll l..

1'4) .

I 111 ' 1 mIll ' I
.., I I{\ It I ..,

p . m.

~•p•r

do He~ting &amp; Cooling inslaik
Lost~ male white/tan BoKer, Jation. Also loa ing for Exred co llar, on Crew Rd. perienced Installer and
Pomeroy, Sat., lamily pet, Tech with 2 years or more.
(740)992 -s936
Send resumes to P.O. Box
572, Kerr, OH 45643.
LOST- Reward, white male
~
Pomeranian puppy, Spring HVAC: a-service tech want·
~ KAJrurfl.j
Valley area, missing since ed: Commercial experience
2-3-03. Childs pet. Please a pius. Musl be reliable &amp;
call (740)446·61 94
have own tools. Travel &amp; Galllpoila Cilroor Col~
• Home)
weekends sometimes req., (c.r..rs Close 110
,
$
.
Call
Today!
74f&gt;.446..4367,
yrs.
experience
5
12
$20hr. Send resume &amp; In·
1·800·214·0452,
..
GC H
PO
Reg#~" 5 ·12 74 B .
WMmD
qumes to: · · unt,
;nrv

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S
Silver, Gold Cains, Proof·
sets,
Diamonds.
Gold
Ri ngs ,
U.S. Currency,·
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec·
and Avenue , Gallipolis. 740446-2842.

:Includes, Free 'Vard "Sale Slgnl
Up To 15 VV.iQrld•.. .3 ~v•
Over 15 VV.ordS · 20¢ Per 'I,IVord
Ads Must Be Pr"!"pal'!'l

:ln•ertlon
p.on o

D••crlptlon • Xndu• A Pf'lc:- • Avald

4405

lOBUY

'

~~.,~00

• Include Phone Number And AddrM• When
• Ad• Should Run 7 D•y•

~~=::ltag~~:~~~eJ~ 4 ~~ 9~~~ ~~~~ ~::d ~o~~=r~ f~~

t

ll\~'~f!tt~t·"" . ,'

'

Visit us at: 200 Maln .Strl!at, Pt. Pl&amp;I!IB&amp;nt
Call us at: (~04) 675-' .3.3.3
Fax us at: (.304) 675-52.34
E -mail us at:
·
claaalfled 0 mydallyreglater.com

• St.rt Your Ad• With A K•vwonl • Include ICompl.te

Succ•s•ful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •••

Iro

..

...

·9'ar.-c/&amp;~ · .....,;...~ .

Monday thru Friday
S:OO a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

llil

.......
&lt; ..

Sentinel

t/tfpee #0~&amp;'

\"\\01 \(I \II\ I"'

..

Visit us at: B25 Third Avenue, Gallipolis · Visit us at 111 Court Street, PoiT'aroy
Call us at: (740) 992·21155
·
·
·
.Call us at: (740) 446·2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
.
E -mail us at:
E-mail us at:
'"
classlfled@mydallytrlbune.com .
claaaltledOmydallyaentlnel.com

Your

white wtth red Interior. For sale or trade, 1990 As~
Always garaged, loaded. tro van Ext., wHI trade lor
(740)379-2216
small car or pick-up truck of
equal value 304-675-5413

'I

OFFICIAL NOTICE
Purt1t111nl to Tille IV
of the Su~ Mining
1nd
Control
'RtCIImlllon Act of
1977, 30 u.s.c.. 1201
et nq., lhl Ohio
Dtparbnlnl
of
Nllurll Rteourcet,
Dlvlilon ol Mlner1l
ReiOUrCII m1n1ge.
ment, hereby glvea
notice ol th1 lVIII·
abiiHy of 1 CATE•
GORICAL
EXCLU·
SION CERnFJCAnON
lor 1n Ablndonld
Mined L.ncJ recllm•
lion project In the
State of Ohio. The
Dlvlalon ot Mlner11

Re

1

o u r c e

1

MlniJIII'nllll
pre•
JIII'ICI lnd the OftiCI
of 8url1ce Mining
Ind.
Rec11m1tlon
Enforcement, United
...... o.p.rtrnent of
the lnllrlor, con·
cwred thlllhiiCIIvt1... bllng undtrtlkln
by lhl JII'OIIOIId proJ·
ICI qUIIJfy II I Cll8gory ofactlonl whiCh

wollkl not lllve atg.

an

nlllcent.rr.ota
the
environment, either
lndlvlduelly or cum~t­
llllvlly. 1111 certlllcetlon Wll eubmltted
by the Dlvlelon In
eppllclllon for '111111V
fln1nCI1I 1111111nce
In reclelmlng 1nd
reatorlng 11nd 1nd
Willi'
reeource1
ldverelly liNe*! by
pall mining. ·A copy
of lhl cert~~~c~t~on 11
IVIIIIIbll !rom tht
Ohio Department of
N1tur1l Reeourc11,
Dlvl1lon ol Mineral
R• • o u r c 1 1
Mlnegement, . 181111
Founllln
Squere
Court, Building H-2,
Columbul,
Ohio

43224.
1111 proJect cov·
erld by IIIII ICIIon II
titled "1!111 2nd
BtJ:-1" (tMO·Bb·tl5)
and II lootllrl north
oJ 8R33 and lmmldl•
ltely WHI ollhl publiC high ICIIOO~ In lhl
vlllege ol Pomeroy,
llllllbury, TOWIIIhlp,
Mllge County, Ohio.
1111 pt DfiCI IIIYOI._
l'll)llrlng 1 vandll·
llld mine dr11,...
ay1181111ncl entry ....
lncl ~Jon ol
t1ww af 'tlcwlll mini
.entry ..... Thle prot.
·tct II 1011% Mdlnllly
If you IIIYI
lilY qutlllol .. Ot aboUt 1111 prot.
ICI, pill" contaot

"""*'.
••

Mr. Terry V1non.ret1
11 the Dlvl1lon'a
eddreullllld above
or II (814) 285-1084.
(2) 8

PUBLIC NOTICE
Till
Columbll
Townehlp Financial
Repon 11 ·complete
1nd IYIIIIbll far
revtew II the clerk'l
OfiiCI,
Mary Br1dy
81NH204
(2) 8

PUBUC NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE,
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER
01-CV-1110
CONSECO FINANCE
SERVICING CORP.
Plllntlll
VI
PATRICK A.
CARROLL, II 11
Deflndlnta
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY,

.

OHIO

In PUI'IIUIRCI of In
Order ol .... to 1111
dlrect.d from 11ld
Court In the aboVe
entltlld ICIIon, I will
ellpoll to 11le II public euctlon on the
front 1tep1 of thl
Mllga County Court
Hou11 on Frldey,
M1rch 7, 2003 et
10:00 1.m., ol nld
day, lhl following
dlacrtbld ...........,
In
the
Slhllltld
Townehlp of Orlftlll,
c-ty ol Mllga end
Stile
ol
OhiO,
Bounded
1nd
dlacribld 11 laHowe:
lllng 1 part of a lrlct
of lind thllla now or
tonner1y In lhl 1111111
ol Dlvld EUIIIM IIICI
Jacqueline lua, 11
recorded In oHiclll
record ttl at Plgl
471, Mllga County
Recordlr'l 1. oHice,
Hid tncl J»&gt;ng 1Jtu.
1tld In Fraction 3,
Townlhlp 4 North,
R1ng1
12 Weal,
Orange Townahlp,

:'!:hi~·=

more
particularly
dllcrtbld .. followll:
lllglnnlng II 1 1111"
X 30" Iron pin with I
pintle ldlntHicltlon
cep " ' on th1

~r~-:...-;

which 1111111, South
It _ . _ 11 mlnutta10-dlwell

• dlallnce ol1,157.24
'"' lncl lOUth 02
11 mlnulle
54 IICOncle Welt I
dllllnce
1,410.71
f"' ,,_ wlllt 11
Itkin to 1111111 north"•'
corner
of
Frectlon 3, Townlhlp
+ North, Ranga 12
Well; thence llong
lhl northerly riiJhl-of·
wey line of B11t1
Roull7, With • curve
to lht ltft, 1M l'ldiUI
bllng 5,808.118 f"',
lhl Delli II 4 dlgreu
18 mlnutee 18 IIi:·
onda and 1long lhl
chord blaring aouth
50 dlgreu 08 mln·
-·-dl-t
a dlllance ol 433.02
fell to 1 point from
which I 1118" X 30"
Iron pin with 1 pl1atlc
CIP HI bllre lOuth
Ul dlgr"• 02 min·
ulle01 ~lUll
• dlallnce of 52.18
fell; 1111nce laving
uld rlght-ol-wey 11111,
north 19
02
mlnutH 01 IICOndl
Will I dlellnee Of
214.112 fill to a 1111" x
30" Iron pin with a
pl1atlc ldtntlflcetlon
CIP Ill; thlnCI north
07
25 min·
IIIII f1T IICondl 1111
1 d l - oi22UO
fell Ia· I 1118" I 30"
Iron pin with • pintle
ldlntlftclllon Clp Ill;
thence aouth 117
35 mlnutta
40 uconde 1111 a
dl1t1nce of 403.34
fell to lhl point ol
blglnnlng, conlllnlng
2.00 acrn, more or
leU, 1r1d IUbjiCt to
all •-mente of
record.
ownere:
Current
Pllrick A. Cerroll 1nd
Chrletl111t L Clrroll
Property 11: 38381
Bille
Route
7,
Rtldavllla,
Ohio
411772
PPt 1CMID311.001
. Died
. Prior
Reference: Volum1
112, Pill 18t
Apprtllld
at:

dig'"•

or

dig,...

dig'"•

dig'"'

m.ooo.oo

r.tmaolllle:
C1nnot bl aold tor
leu then 213rdl of
the IPPI'IIIId VIIUI,
10% clown on day
...., cull or certllltd
chiCk, bll1nce on

or

-'lrmiiJon or ....

lllllph I. Truulll
Slllrtfl, Mllal
Counly, Ohlo
Reimer • Lorber Co.,
·L.P.A.
By: Dennla Reimer

(Reg. 10048779)
Attorney1 for Plelntlll

2450 Edlaon Blvd.
P.O. Box 988
1Wineburg, Ohio

L.P.A.

44087

43208

(614) 221·1662
(2) 6, 13, 20, 27, (3) 8

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

Shlrlll'a Bill of Rill
Eallte
1111 State of Ohio,
Mllga County,
Mortgage Electronic
Regletrlllon
Syettma,
InC. •• Noml"" for
HOUIIholdRuHy
Corporation ekl
HoUIIhold FlllltfiCI
Corporlllon
Plaintiff
VI
Gall McAblllkl Gall

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Ia hereby
that
on
given
Saturday, February a,
2003, at 10:00 a.m., a
public Ale will bl
held at 211 Weal
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
parking lot ol .The
Farmert Bank and
Savlnga Company.
The Fannera. Bank
and
Saving•
COmJ111ny Ia ealllng
far C.lh In hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
1992 Ford Taurus
F
1
5
0
1FACP52UIING213111
1991· Ford Eacon
1FAPP1 1J8MW38387
7
The Fannart Bank
and
Savlnga
Comp1ny, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
Hie, end to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to 111e. Further,
The Farmara Bank
and
S.vlnga
Company r•aarvaa
the right to rejlct any
or all blda 1ubmlltld.
The
above
daacrlbed collateral
will bl aold "11 Ia·
where Ia", with no
expresHCI or Implied
warranty glvan.
For tunhlr Information, or lor an
appointment
to
lniJIIICt
collateral,
prior to ule elite contact
Cyndla
Rodriguez et 112·
2138.
(2) 5, 6, 7

Zirkle

Ca" No. 01-CV-102
In purauance of an
order ol Bill In the
above111tltlld 1ctlon,
I will offer for 1111 at
public auction, 11 the
Courthouea
h1
Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
1bove 111mld County,
on the 13th dey of
March, 2003, at 10:30
a.m., the following
·dllcrlbld rul eallle,
to wit:
Sltueted In the
Sllte of Dhlo, County
of
Melga
and
Townahlp
of
llllabury 1nd bllng
further dlecrlbld ••
followe:
Being all of Lot
1440 1nd 15 feat
adJoining Jlllrt oJ Lot
1441 IIICI bllng a pan
ol the aama rul
eatete conveyed by
J1maa R. Eada to
Jam•• II Allan by
died record•d In
Deed Book 197, P~g~
15, Deed R-dl of
Mtlga County, OhiO.
PlrCII No. 15·
01407-000 •
15·
014CJ8.000
llld
Preml111
Loclllll 11 7110 Llturel
Str"t, Mlddlepon,
Olilo 4117110
l•ld
Premlaea
Apprlltld
II
$25,000.00 end cen·
not Ill aold far leN
thin two-thlrda of
that amount.
TERMIOFIALE :
. $5,000.00
down,
rMIIInder upon lin·
der ofdlld.
Relph E. Tru'"'l
llhlrlll ol Melgl
County, OH
FRANK.
WOOLDRIDGE CO.,

PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
The 2002 Annuel
Financial Repon for
the Melg1 County
Dlatrlct Public Llbrery
11 compiete 1nd evaiJ.
able for NYIIw II the
Mllga County Dlatrlct
Public
Library,
Pomeroy Br1nch.
Connie Taylor
Clerk1T1'111urer
MCDPL
(2) 6 1TC

Open 9am-~pm
FrcePlimaiCJ, f~CC in~ pickup
Call ~• fcul! ~011r compute• neoo,b

(740) 446·1812

740a992-7599

Anorneya lor Plalntlll
800 South Purl
Strt1t
Columbus, Ohio

(330) 425-4201
(2) 8, 13, 20, 2003

My money Is wllh

Rocky Hupp lnluranca .
and Rnonclal s..rca..
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone: 843-5264."

Hill 's Self
Storag e
29670 Bashan Road
· Racine, Ohio
45771
740-849-2217

IIlli

FIIU

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING'
Le' m~ ]·: 1: f:.i y:u'

CIISlllmiN
Building over 30 years
Footers, Foundation,

A,dd·Ons, New Homes,
Pole Barns, Concrete,
Electric, Plumbing
!IJ.Jurance 1\\:ork Included

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00 PM

Advertise

In this
space
for

$75
per
month

HOWARDL.

WRITESEL
*IOIRII
*HOlE
IIIITEIIUCE
*SUIlUI
8mER
*fnl Eltllllltll*

IM9-1405

(740) 992·3320
Email: bladesO:z:apllnk..com

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes
Garages
Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

• Room Addltlona a
RemOdeling
• New Garage•
• Electrical I Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutten
• VInyl Siding a P•lntlng
• Patio and Porch Decka
Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

'
[:JIIUJ!I{JI ' _'....fat f:, ~
\1 rllf N&amp;W'·'Ptlf'C'~' '
"

-

~----;

....... .

NOTICE
Notice is given that Verizon North Inc. (Verizon), a local exchange
carrier, filed self-complaints with the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio (Case Nos. 02·3038-TP-SLF, 02-3039·TP-SLF, and 02·3040·
TP-SLF) in order to: establish a charge of $.75 for local directory
assistance; establish a late payment charge of 1.5 percent for bills
not paid after 30 days from the customer's bil.ling cycle; and increase
its National Directory Assistance charge from $.95 to $1 .25.
Any interested person, firm, corporation, or entity desiring an oral
hearing in these matters should file a request with the Commission
stating the reasons for the request, along with a motion to intervene
in the aforementioned case(s), on or before March 13, 2003. Unless
the Commission receives a' request for an oral hearing and an
accompanying motion to intervene, the case will be decided on the
basis of the information contained in the complaint and the attached
exhibits. Further information may be obtained by contacting the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 180 East Broad Street,
Columbus, Ohio 43215-3793, or by contacting the Commission's
hotllne at 1-800·686·7826. The hearing impaired can reach the
Commission via TIY·TDD at 1-800·686-1570 or in Columbus via
466·8180.
·'

�Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 6, 2()03

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

'Odd ducks' in teen years
can easily turn into swans
DEAR ABBY: May I corn·
ment on the letter from the
girl who has a crush on the
"weird" guy in her high·
school band?
Thirty years ago. I was that
weird guy with the burr hair·
cut, buck teeth, hom-rimmed
glasses and skinny as a rail. I
had a crush on a good-looking
blonde, but she was out of my
league, so I never asked her
out.
Twenty-nine years later, I
was on the Internet. Through
a classmates reunion site, she
and I started chatting. She was
divorced, as was I. The ·more
we talk~ the more we fell
for each o~en I finally
decided to visit her- " •
works" flew.
We have been married one
year this week. and it has been
one of the most exciting years
of my life. Teii"Odd Duck" to
hang in there. Things will be
great if meant to be. - HER·
. MAN B., WATERFORD,
CALIF.
DEAR
H.B.:
Congratulations on your
anniversary. (I'm a sucker for
a hapr.y ending!) Many people, hke fine ·wme, 1mprove
with age. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I'd like to
respond to "Odd Duck in
South Texas." Bravo for you,
young lady! When I was in
high school, I was considered

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
an "odd duck" myself. I didn 't
drink, smoke, or ride around
aimlessly every Friday and
Saturday night. I studied, got
excellent grades, respected
my parents, and for that, I was
ostracized by my classmates
and a
s felt like an outer.
You and your friend Tad
should hang in there. When
you finish high school, and
later, college, you ' II realize
that the people most worth
knowing JUSt might be those
"odd ducks." - HILLARY
IN WEINER, ARIZ.
DEAR HILLARY: You're
right. Some people develop
social skills later than others.
DEAR ABBY: I, too, was
not the "coolest" kid in high
school, and I was also in the
band. I was desperately in
love with a popular girl I' II
call Susan. We were good
friends, but it never went further.
Years later, Susan confessed

to me that she also had feel·
ings for me, but was afraid her
friends would tum on her for
not dating someone from the
"cool" crowd.
Living your life by some·
one else's standards is not living at all. "Odd Duck's" ugly
duckling might someday
become a swan. - HAPPI·
LY MARRIED IN PHILLY
DEAR HAPPILY MAR·
RIED: It takes courage to
stand by one 's convictions.
Susan's lack of maturity was
its own _punishment.
,
DEAR ABBY: I am an 11·
year-old boy, and my mom
says if I want something at the
store, I have to pay for it
myself. I try to do chores for
money, but I'm always too
busy with schoolwork. I barely get enough time to play
outside. Do you have any suggestions on · how to get
money? - NEEDS $$
DEAR NEEDS $$: Talk to
your parents and ask them if
your chores can be done on
the weekends. If you want
something badly enough,
you 'II find the time.
WORTH REMEMBER·
lNG: "People can keep a
journal to record their life,
their thoughts, their happiness, the events of their families, etc. They can also keep a
journal of creative observations, their hopes, their ideas

and dreams, as Leonardo da
Vinci did. He always had· a
notebook hangin~ from his
belt to record hts observations. I have one constantly in
my pocket and on my mght
table.. We must be the source
of good ideas and dream$ for
a better world. We are part of
evolution." ROBERT
MULLER
Dear Abby is wrinen 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

· and On
6 House pets 45 Starting
10 Not
gate
transparent 47 Mercllan·
12 Rococo
dlse ID
14 More or
50 Hanging
lell
ornament
15 Kind ohoup 52 Flashes
16 Makes up 54 Young •
for
raptors
18 Rover's
58 Travel
greeting
stopovers
19 Mongollan 59 Lebanese
desert
port
21 60 Sampru of
spumante
tennis
23 Pull
61 Horse race
24 Graceful
DOWN
tree
26 Celebrity
1 Python
29 Lend a
2 Aries mo.
hand
3 Southeast
30 Lemprey .
Asian
32 Dragged
4 Pigeon
Into court
5 Daddy's
34 Mirth
slater
36 Lilly or
. 6 Hilltops
Wallach
7 "That Girl"
37 ··-·Pan"
girl
(Ciavell
8 So long, In
novel)
38 Bridge
Soho

1 Light wood

Southem girls clinch TVC title, B1

Serle• mo.
43 Talks on

bldr.

40 Double
curve

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
12 Pamplona
shouts
13 Brownie
17 Unknown
19 Cunning
20 Limerick
writer
- Nash
22 "-a deall"
23 Price ticket
25 Splks or
Bruce
27 Traffic .
Jammers
28 Show
surprlee
31 Lily, to
Pierre
33 Telegraph
signal

Unnerve
Erupted .
Game fish
Dragon ol ·
euppetry
47 'Yuck!" · ·
48 Drop
heavily
.
49 Summon to·
court
•
51 Expre11
grief
53 Beauty· •
salon 1tem
55 Slip up
56 Open
container
57 Animal
shelter

39
41
44
46

matter what
direction you turn
you can always find
It In the
~o

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

Major beneficial changes
could be in the offinl;\ for you
in the year ahead m many
phases of your life. Disagree- .
able situations or people will
be replaced with attra&lt;.:tive. arrangements and circumstances.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - There are personal opportunities hovering about
you today from sou"es you· d
least expe&lt;.:t. Be a good listener if a trusted friend starts
talking about an interesting
development she or he encountered.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March
20) - This could turn out to
be an exceptionally pleasant
day for· you, especially if you
are single and attend some
type of event where there are
lots of members of the opposite gender present.
ARIES {March 21-April
19) - You could find yourself on the same wavelength
today with persons who have

considerable innuence. It' s an
excellent tune to press for a
favor if_you're in need of one.
. TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - If you plan to leave
your home today , take your
cell phone with you or leave a
message where you can be
reached . Someone you· ve
been hoping to hear from
mieht be tryinu to read! you.
· GEMINI {~&gt;lay 21-June 20)
- Without being asked. a
person who cares a great deal
for you. but who is not very
demonstrative, may show his
or her desire to please you by
doing something very nice for
you today.
CANCER (June 21-Ju\y
. 22) - Connect with someone
or some group today and offer
your involvement. Any partnership arrangement you
make should work out very
well for you, even if you play
a minor role.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You'll not only achieve a
great sense of accomplishment today by performing up
to your highest level. but what

you do will be noticed and admired by others as well.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Whe.ther you seek them or
not. a number of social invitations could be coming your
way today. You ' re far more
popular than you may think.
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- A subtle but important
change for which you've been
hoping may transpire today. It
will bring you and someone
you love much closer together.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - You could find yourself in the middle of an altercation between two of your
pals. You will have them

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21)- If you check your
resources carefully today, you
should be able to find, much
to your delight, the ways and
means to purchase something
rather luxurious that you' ve
been longing for.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22Jan . 19) - Fun diversions
won't be a waste of time today where you' re concerned.
In fact, bringing a little levity
into your life will have a r¢vitalizmg affect upon your o.utJook.

N,
y,

®

....]]_

2nd DOWN •

-

27

= 129
-255

• 22

JUDD'S TOTAl

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AVERAGE GAME 200-210
by JUDD HAMBRICK

previous
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savings in premiums for persana! liability, personal injury,
property damage, public official liability and law enforcement liability insurance
through the affiliation.
. According to Brooks and
Shrimplin, the county could
save $60,000 per year on its
· · coverage.
liability
The county now pays
$188,000 per year for liability
coverage through a private carrier in Jackson, while the same
insurance through · CORSA
would cost only $128,000.
Premium increases are also
minimized through CORSA

members h i p ,
B r o o k ,s
said. Last
year, member counties

e~rienced
0 Y five to

I 0-percent
increases in
Davenport c~~.v e r 3 g e
Pomeroy
Agent John Musser would provide local service on the policy.
if
it
is
approved.
Commissioners will take
action on .lb!!ir liability insur-

rate Increase

ance carrier at their Feb. 13
meeting.
Commissioners also:
• Approved new fund line
items and appropriation adjustments for the Veterans Service
Office
and
Community
Corrections program;
• Approved 2003 allocations
for the Meigs County Council
on Aging, in the amount of
$4,000, and the Meigs County
Agricultural Society, in the
amount of $6,500.
Present were Commissioners
Jeff
Thornton,
Mick
Davenport, and Jim Sheets,
and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Bv J. MILES lAYToN
Staff wr"er
RACINE
Charter
Communications is going to
raise cable rates whether the
village likes it or not.
Racine Village Council
has received a letter stating
rate increases would go into
effect in February.
According to ClerkTreasurer David Spencer,
the almost I 0 percent rate
increase is non-negotiable.
Basic cable, which had
cost $21, will now cost
$22.95 each month.
Mayor Scott Hill has basic
no frills cable service. He
said he currently pays about
$45 a month and now rates
are going up again. After
hearing about the form letter
from Charter, Hill said "that
is the way these people deal
with us telling us that is the

J.

SMITH

~OUII.

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TO ~H~I\E

AT

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WOIIIE N
ALWA~&amp;

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FUTURt

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~~~~~~~~

NEW HAVEN - The sad
saga of Highlanders . Alloys
continued, Wednesday when
employees ceased work at 3
p.m. and 'began staging an
mformational picket alleging
unfair labor practices. ·
Tim Sines, acting president
of United Steelworkers Local
5171, 'said the reason for the
work stoppage was because
Highlanders failed to meet
last Friday's payroll and did
not make good on paying
insurance premiums.
Sines said when plant
owner and manager Boris
Bannai failed to meet the
l)xtension the union granted
him, workers began walking
off the job.
.
"As a .local, we're just not
going to stand for it," Sines
said. "We want eight hours
pay for eight hours work, and
we want paid on time. This .is
a hard-working bunch of men
and women."
Sines said attempts to continue negotiations with
Bannai have been unsuccess. ful as he is reported to be out
of the country.
Sines also said telephone
service to Highlanders' main
Pl..- see Picket. A5

Index
.

Comics

Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies

Obituaries
Sports

Weather

Elf J.

MILES lAYTON

Staff writer

RACINE - Tampering
with mayor's court could be
considered out of order in this
small village along the banks
of the Ohio River.
Mayor Scott Hill said the
village is not a speed trap and
collects less than $5,000 a year
in fees from mayor's court.
The mayor said the village
collected a meager $4,8941ast
year. The village share of this
amount was about $3 ,714, and
the state's share was more than
$1.180.
'The figures justify this,"
Hill said. "We are not a town
that fills our general fund
based on fines collected from
traffic violations." ·
Hill said hiring a village
magistrate wouJd be fmancially irresponsible if that person
were paid an amount similar to
what the magistrate in
Pomeroy reglives, which is
more than $500 per month.
Pomeroy also collects more
than $145,000 each year for its
share of the fines. The state
and county share of the fines
varies year to year, but several

One of the places celebrating "Food Check Out Day' locally was Powell's Supervalu in
Pomeroy. Debbie Michael and Gloria Michael, both of Syracuse, check out their purchases.
(J. Miles Layton)

Farm Bureau:·Food still best buy
'

BY CHARUNE HOEFUCH

News editor
POMEROY - Did you
know that as the years go by
. food is taking a smaller percent of your paycheck?
In 1960, food costs took
an average of 17.5 percent
of income. In 1990, it was
11.6 percent, and today it is
10 percent, acoording to Pat
Petzel, director of promotion and education for the
Ohio
Farm
Bureau
Foundation (OFBF).

"Food is America's greatest resource and it's greatest
bargain," said Petzel, the
reason Thursday for celebrating in · Ohio "Food
Check Out Day."
The day marked when the
average American . family
has earned enough income
to pay for the entire year's
food supply.
"It may seem like we pay
a lot for food, but the truth
is, food is one of the most
affordable things we buy,"
said the Farm Bureau
spokesman.

"We have the American ·
farmer to thllnk," Petzel
said, noting that only 19
cents out of every dollar we
spend on food goes back to
the farmer. That's down
from 31 cents in 1980.
Several local supermarkets celebrated the day,
although most customers
seemed unaware and surprised that five weeks into
the new year, they had made
enough money to pay for
their food for the year.
That is, if they fit into the
average American category.

thousands ;Of dollars can be
added to this average annual
amount.
"I feel that it is not economically feasible to hire a magistrate because of the amount of
fees collected in the village,"
he said.
Hill said he has taken the
rigorous mayor's court training cou= which trains people
how to preside and rule in
niinor traffic and rule infractions that come before the
court. Even licensed anorneys
bave to take !his course. in
order to preside over the court.
John Mahoney, deputy
director of the Ohio Municipal
League. said 70 percent of the
people taking the course are
now licensed attorneys who
will be serving as magistrates.
Civic service is what Hill is ·
all about. He said he tries to be
fair and always upholds the
law when making decisions
which will affect friends and
neighbors.
"My main concern is that
we protect the citizens, and '
eliminate wrongdoing and
troublemaking, and not conPlease sH Mayor. A5

Buckeye Hills to assist in dentist search

2 5actlons - 12 Paps

Calendar
Classifieds

way it 1s despite our
protests."
.
Hi II said increased prices
will hurt many senior citizens in the community who
live on fixed incomes. Like
many council members, Hill
is convinced the cable company could care less.
Council member Jqe
Evans wondered aloud what
the customer would be getting for the increased cable
rates. He said Charter would
probably add two more
worthless channels broadcast from Mongolia that
people could care less about.
Charter has also increased
the price for cable band
Internet access.
Customers that were paying $29.95 per month will
now be charged $34.95 per
month, which is almost a J7
percent increase. Spence~
said this would affect a lot of
people.
.

Local officials
find need for
mayor's courts

Staff writer

Answer

hi DOWN

Bv BRIAN J.
Staff writer

BY lAWRENCE

\\'ORB SCRIMMAGE" SOWTION BY JUDO HAMBRICK
C,, I,

www.mydaily•entinel.com

'Check's
in the
mail'
for local
workers

laughing in no time at what
caused the tension in the first
place.

e ~ooa Vnlt&lt;J """"' s~ •• 1nc.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2003

Commissioners conSider Racine reacts
liability insurance pitch to C~arter .
POMEROY - The cost of
liability insurance for Meigs
County government, cited as a
root cause of the county's
financial woes, could be significantly reduced through association with a coalition of counties.
Dave Brooks and Jenny
Shrimplin of the County Risk
Sharing Authority (CORSA),
an association of 54 member
counties, met with Meigs
County
commissioners
Thursday to discuss possible

35 - foo VUn!l

Astrograph
Friday. Feb. 7. 2003

SO CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 121

.A2
84·5
86
86
A4
A2·3
AS
81-3

A2

C&gt; 2003 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

dentist, if recruited, would
likely locate at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, according to Me1gs County
Commissioner
Mick
BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer
Davenport.
The Meigs County Health
Department opened a rural
POMEROY - Funding for dental clinic in Middleport in
continued low-income dental 200 I, using funds from a
services in Meigs County is $200,000
Appalachian
secure for now, and a new

ARC dental
funding available

Regional
Commission
grant. That
clinic was
closed last
year, after
the dentist
hired to run
the clinic,
and
his
li-o-rr...:es;;..._. replacement,

Heart

left the area.
Commissioners
met
Thursday
with
Boyer
Simcox, Director of the
Buckeye
Hills/Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development District, which
administers ARC grant funds ,
to determine of the county
will have access to the
remainder of the two-year

grant award if a dentist can be
found.
According to Davenport,
Simcox has agreed to work
with · Health Commissioner
Norma Torres. the Meigs ·
County Board of Health and
Dr. Nick Husted, a dentist
with The Ohio State
Please see Dentist. A5

r

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