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                  <text>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 •

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.....

JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

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YOU WMIT 1lJ StiAR~ THE
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CltOGOL~TE5

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REED .

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.

TOO MUCH CHOCOLATE!!

'IOU.
TO ~H~I\E

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~RIEN~

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$\X MOIITII5
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litE
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WOIIIE N
ALWA~&amp;

Of!EII. A
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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�Local• Ohio

the Daily Sentinel
Feb. 8

EVENDALE (AP) -

I Monollolcl lrll7' I •

. 1Columbuo lw/S2" I

KY.

c 2003 AccuWeatnar, 11"10..

(!·-- .. -·~·

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

Friday, February 7, l003

Million meters rowing award
Former Cincinnati
officer gets permanent
status in Evendale

Ohio weather
~aturday,

PageA2

~

FUnn

Rain

Tot!Ofl'!\l

Snow

lei

Sunny, chilly on Saturday
BY rnE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Winds. Chance of snow 20 perSnow will come to an end in cent.
the area today.
Saturday... Mostly
sunny.
Temperatures will remain Highs in the lower 30s. West
nearly steady in the lower and winds 5 to 15 mph.
mid 20s through early afterSaturday
night...Partly
noon then begin to fall into the cloudy. A slight chance of snow
teens by evening. Skies will be showers late. Lows in the lower
clearing from the west. The 20s. Chance of snow 20 permercury will continue to fall cent.
through the teens.
.
Extended forecast:
Sunshine will greet the day
Sunday... Mostly cloudy with
on Saturday due to high pres- a chance of snow showers.
sure building in from the south- Highs in the upper 30s. Chance
west. A favorable southerly of snow 30 percent.
wind flow will also bring in
Sunday night. ..Cloudy with a
milder air and moderating tern- chance of snow showers. Lows
peratures to near 30 degrees.
in the mid 20s. Chance of snow
A cold front will bring an end
to this weather with another 40 percent.
chance·for snow Saturday night
Monday...Partly cloudy. A
chance of snow showers until
and Sunday. A second front, an nlidnight. Highs in the mid 305.
Arctic front, will race south~
ward from the northern
Thesday...Partly cloudy with
Canadian tundra and push a chance of snow showers.
h d ·
M da Thi Lows in the upper teens and
sout
unn~
on y.
s hi~s the lower 30s.
front will bring another round
of scattered snow showers and
ednesday.. .A chance of
much colder temperatures to snow showers during the day,
the area at midweek.
otherwise partly cloudy. Lows
Weather forecast:
in the nlid teens and highs in the
Tonight. ..Mostly cloudy with mid 30s.
a slight chance of snow show- · Thursday... Partly cloudy.
ers early, then mostly clear. Lows in the lower 20s and
Lows near I0 above. Light west highs in the lower 40s.

A

former Cincinnati police
officer whose fatal shooting
of an unarmed black man
triggered rioting has completed probation and now is
a pennanent full-time officer
in·this suburb.
During his one-year training period, Stephen Roach
survived a legal challenge of
his hiring.
Last July, a lawsuit flied
by the Concerned Citizens of
Evendale seeking a town
vOle on the hiring of Roach
was disntissed by the Ohio
Supreme Court
Roach was hired last
January after he resigned
from the Cincinnati police
force. He was acquitted in
September 200 I of misdemeanor charges in the April
7, 2001, shooting death of
Timothy Thomas.
The shooting of Thomas,
wanted on I4 warrants, as he
was fleeing police set off the
worst racial unrest in

Cincinnati in decades.
Roach, 28, is white.
Some Evendale residents
protested Roach's hiring, but
officials said he was the bestqualified candidate and they
refused to rescind the hiring.
The residents opposing
Roach asked for a referendum, but village officials
refused. They said they
received two legal opinions
saying that conducting a
public vote on administrative
maners such a~ hiring is ille.gal.
· Then carne the lawsuit that
was rejected by the Supreme
Court.
Evendale' police Chief
Gary Foust said on Thursday
that Roach completed his
field training with very high
performance marks.
Members
of
·the
Concerned Citizens of
Evendale said they'll be
keeping a watchful eye on
Roach.

Triple play: Jewish author
compares the vvords of
·. Jesus and Muhammad
BY RICHARD N. 0&amp;TUNG
Associated press writer

Ray Oliver accepts his Million Meters Rowing Award from Joy
Bentley, who is in charge of the Meigs County Council on
Aging's exercise program. He recently accomplished his goal
of rowing a million meters. He rowed constantly and nearly
every week day for about a year. Concept II awards rowers
with a million meter tee shirt, a certificate, and a patch to recognize their accomplishment. Oliver Is the first exerciser In the
fitness program to· receive this award.

Community calendar
Public
Meetings
Friday, Feb. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of
Education will meet in special session at 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the administration
office for a discussion on
personnel.

Clubs and
Organizations

Friday, Feb. 8
POMEROY - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen 5:30 p.m.
Saturday at the hall for a
potluck meal. The camp will
furnish meat, b"verage,
bread and table service.
Those attending are to take a
covered dish . Friends and
neighbors welcome.

Friday, Feb. 7
POMEROY
Meigs
PERl 74, noon luncheon at
the Senior Citizens Center
with meeting to follow. Brett
Jones. Meigs County State
Highway
Department
Saturday, Feb. 9 ·
superintendent, will discuss
POMEROY Return
roads in Meigs County.
Saturday, .Feb. 8
Jonathan
Meigs
Chapter,
CHESTER Chester Memberships are being
Daughers of the American
Township Trustees, 9 a.m accepted for 2003. ·
Revolution, 10 a .m. at
Chester town hall.

Grace Episcopal Church.
Winners of history essay
contest will be recognized
and
good
citizenship
awards will be presented.

Church
meetings
Sunday, Feb. 8
LONG BOTIOM - Harry
Bush of Pensacola, Fla. will
speak at 6:30p.m. at the Mt
Olive Church at Long
Bottom. Pastor lawrence
Bush invites the public.

m·

•

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Feb. 6, 2003

10,000

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Jones

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NOV

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Feb. 6.2003

uoo

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Local Stocks
AEP- 22
Arch Coal- 17.09
AkZo - 24.98
AmTech/SBC- 24.91
Ashland Inc.- 27.98
AT&amp;T -17.82
Bank One- 35.66

BLI - 11.25

Bob Evans- 22.05
BorgWarner- 54.06
Champion - 3.I 7
Charming Shops- 3.51
City Holding- 28.25
Col- 20.38
DG -10.80
DuPont - 38 .70

Fodorol Mogul - .I t
USB- 20.49
Gannen - 72.66
General Eloctric ~ 22.89
GKNLY- 3.30 •
Haney Davtdaon- 4M3
Kmart- .11
Kroger - 14.38
Ltd.- 12.07
NSC- 19.24
Oak H~ Flnonclol-24.34
OVB-22.30

BBT-32.53
Peoples - 24.16

Pepsico - 40.22
Premier - 8.20

Rockwell- 22.55
Rocky Boola - 5.30
RD Shell -,. 40.04
Saara -23.31
wa~Mert - 48.79
Wendy'• - 25.90
Worthington - I 4.17
Dally stock raporta are
the .4 p.m. closing
quOiea of the previous

day's tranoactlona. provided by Smith Partners
at Adveat Inc. of
Galllpolla.

Cincinnati Jazzfest to move
to Detroit due to boycott .
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
organizer of a jazz festival will
move the event to Detroit this
year because effons by black
acti vists to boycott downtown ·
Cincinnati have hurt profits.
Boycott-related artist cancellations and a shrinking audience caused producer Joe
Santangelo to cancel JazzFest
iast year for the first time since
his family staned putting on
the event in 1962.
Thi s year, the two-day event
in July will be moved to
Detroit 's Comerica Park .
"I can 't get a sponsor,"
Santangelo said. "I've got two

competing beer companies
interested, but how can I say to
them, 'I want you to sponsor
this event,' when I don't know
what's going to happenT'
The boycott started after
three nights of riots in April
200 I after a white police officer shot and killed a black man
who was fleeing police.
Advocates are trying to pressure the city into making
changes they say are needed to
improve the lives of blacks in
Cincinnati.
In 200 I, the festival was
held a few months after the
riots and lost $550,000.

.Mexican lawsuit against U.S. could affect death row inmate
MIDDLETOWN (AP)- A
lawsuit filed against . the
United States by the Mex1can
government could affect the
death row status of a man convicted of killing four people in
thiMOuthwest Ohio city. .
Jose Trinidad Loza, of Los
Angeles, was 18 when . the
murders occurred in January
1991. He was sentenced to
die for killing his pregnant
girlftiend's mother and three
siblings while on a visit to
Middletown, Authorities said
he shot them in the head as
they slept, using a bedroom
slipper as a silencer.
l.Oza is in the Mansfield
Correctional
Institution
awaiting execution while his
appeals continue.
-The Mexican lawsuit filed
in January in the World Court
aslcs that the court stay the
executions of Loza and 53
other Mexican nationals on
death rows across the United
States until the court decides
whether police violated their
rights under the 1963 Vtenna
Convention.
Loza is the only Ohio death
row inmate among those
cited in the lawsuit, the
Dayton Daily News reported
Friday.
Mexico has accused U.S.
authorities of routinely violating the treaty - interrogat-

ing, trying, convicting and
sentencing foreign nationals
without giving them proper
notice of their rights. ·
The World Court, officially
known as the International
Court of Justice, is the United
Nations' instrument for resolving disputes between nation~.

Under the Vtenna Convention,
foreign nationals who are
arrested must be advised of
their right to contact their consulates ''Without delay.''
·
The World Court ruled
Wednesday that the United
States must temporarily stay
the executions of the three
inmates closest to being put to

death, but the ruling is not
enforceable.
An attorney representing the
United
States,
Elihu
Lauterpacht, has called the
Mexican case a publicity
stunt, and said the federal government may not be able to
stop states from executing the
inmates.

OTICE

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

YOUR
6unbap ·

lim~ -6tntinel

AVAILABLE
SATURDAY

8:00P.M.

. UNDATED - Here's an
unusual religious triple play:
A Jewish writer compiles a
book that coml?ares the words
of Jesus wtth those of
. Muhammad from six centuries later.
"Jesus and Muhammad:
The Parallel · Sayings" was
edited by Joey Green, who
also produced "Jesus and
Moses: .The Parallel Sayings"
(both Ulysses Press). ·As an
added feature, he commissioned a foreword by Sayyid
M. Syeed, secretary general
of the Islamic Society of
North America.
Islam does not really re~ard
the Quran as "sayings' of
Muhammad but direct words
from God revealed through
the prophet. In that sense,
these words are properly parallel with sayings of Jesus
because Christianity regards
him as God made man and
his words as precisely those
of God.
Some of Green's selections
come from the Hadith, a collection of authoritative traditions about Muhamrnad,
rather than from the Quran,
and are appropriately considered
"sayings
of
Muhammad."
Green hopes "this book
brings all humanity closer
together" and believes that
"in nearly every case the ethical lessons Jesus preached
- love, compassion, peace,
forgiveness and repentance
- match the core values
revealed to Muhammad."
Syeed agrees that the sayings show "the common
source of inspiration for the
family of AJ)rahamic faiths
- Judaism, Christianity and
Islamt Especially since Se(lt.
1!, 2001, he writes, it's
important to strengthen bonds
among believers of three
faitJls· that have "shared values •and heritage.'!
·oesplte this .multicultural
slalll; , Green · does · note that

COLD
POP

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.
(AP) - Ken Kemper has
been chosen to succeed his
father Bruce as president of
Grace Bible College.
The younger Kemper took
over leadership of the evan-

20 oz. bottle

Only

69¢

gelical Christian school on
Jan. 30.
Bruce Kemper, 65, who
has led the college since
1991, is retiring to Arizona
with his wife, Judi, and
plans to return to parish ministry.
Ken Kemper, 40, has
spent the past 16 years doing
mission work overseas, a
qualification the college 's
board found appealing.

You would not believe all the possibilitie$
I have been re~istered in West
Virginia to wnpue high school
softball and baseball for several
years. It never ceases to amaze
me all the potential circumstances possible involving these
two sports.
At the recent softball interpreters meeting in Parkersburg,
Rodney Jones of the Mid-Ohio
board proposed a possibility
that stimulated a great deal of
discussion.
When a pitcher commits an
infraction while in the process
of delivering a pitch, it is
' declared an illegal pitch, which
is dealt with according to the
rule.
If the batter does not hit the
illegal pitch. then a ball is
awarded to the batter and each
base runner is advanced one
b~.

If the batter hits the illegal
pitch, the coach of the offensive
team has an option to take the
result of the play or the penalty
cited above.
Rodney asked what the consequence would be if there was
a runner on base and the batter

Ron
Branch
GUEST VIEW

was hit with the illegal pitch.
Would the runner be advanced
in addition to awarding first
base io the hit batter?
We went round and round on
this one for a long time.
Casebook situations were
searched. Rules were considered. It was a room full of rules
interpreters from across the
state trying to interpret the
basics of a rule, which no one
present had seen happen, but
most certainly could happen. It
concerned us, because we wanted to know how to rule if it happened while we were umpiring.
I enjoyed every minute of it
You had to be there to understand how there could be enjoy-

ment in it Umpires have a hean
for the kids, and for the game
itself that drives them to consider the possibilities.
But, in the end, it was determined that the rule for a hit batter was to be the primary
enforcement. The runner on
base could not be advanced
unless forced to do so as a result
of the batter being awarded first
base.
That is what makes softball
and baseball so intriguing from
a study perspective on the rules.
The gamut of possible plays in
relationship to the rules possesses a very wide range.
But in my mind, all of this
serves merely as a simple contrast to the greatness of God and
the way He mercifully and graciously deals with each and
every one of us.
To the mindset of many,
being a Christian is very much
limited to a rigid interpretation
of Biblical rules and principles.
'Thou shalt not" is often
viewed as a penalty capable of
snuffing the enjoyable essence
out of life. The "straight and

narrow gate" concept is regarded as a constriction of personal·
freedom compared to the styles
of the "wide and broad way''
portrayed and pursued by most..
Yet, the opposite actually
stands as the truth. Life in the
Lord Jesus Christ possesses
possibilities so vast that we faif
to even scratch the surface of
what He has in store for us, here
and now, as well as for the eter"
nal future . Funhermore, one
never experiences true freedorn
until they experience peace with
the Lord. The quality of lite is.
never more open than when one
embraces the abundant life
offered by Christ.
Terms found in Ephesians I;
such as inheritance, the hope of
his calling, the riches of the
glory, and the exceeding greatness of his power toward us
who believe - and many other
explanations in God's Word,
overwhelm us with possibilitiesthat makes life one grand exKrience.
You just have to have a pan in
it and heart for it to understand
exactly what I am talking about.- .

- - -- - - - - -- - - -- - - - - - - - -- - - ----------:-.. .

An American tradition: U.S. presidents continue _.
to tangle with their religious denominations
President Bush and his father
each have been at odds with
leaders of their Protestant faiths
over a potential war with Iraq,
recent examples of what acadenlics say is an often contentious
relationship between presidents
and their clergy.
"It's relatively easy for presidents to get on the outs with
their denominations," says
Wake
Forest
University
Divinity School dean Bill J.
Leonard. In fact, it's hard to find
a 20th century president who
didn't butt heads with some in
his faith:
- The devout Woodrow
Wilson
upset
fellow
Presbyterians as he moved the
nation toward entering World
War I, including William
Jennings Bryan, wbo quit as
secrel!U)' of state.
.
- Harry Truinan, the frrst
Southern l'iajltist in the White
House, annoyed some in that
denonlination by spouting
"hells" and ''damns" in conver·
sation. Jimmy Carter angered
Baptist pastors by favoring
abortion rights.

- Richard Nixon, a nominal
Quaker, was strongly opposed
by that pacifist faith over the
Vietnam War.
Last week. it was former
president George H.W. Bush
who was in conflict with his
church. In a televised speech, he
recalled his polite dispute over
the Gulf War with the fonner
head of his Episcopal Church,
Presiding Bishop Edmond
Browning, then said he's "highly offended" by foreign policy
statements
from
current
Frank
Presiding
Bishop
Griswold.
His son, George W..Bush, the
frrst Methodist president in a
century, disagrees with leaders
of his denomination, too. In a
TV a,rWflonsored by .~ group
inclutllng- the National Council
of Churches, . a · prominent
Methodist bishop, preac~es that
the impending war with Iraq
"violates God's law and the

teachings of Jesus Christ"
Twenty bishops and other
Methodist officials joined an
urgent religious plea against
military action, and the
Methodists' social issues
spokesman headed tor a gathering of ecclesiastical doves in
Berlin.
The phenomenon isn't exclusively American, of course.
Bush's chief international ally,
British Prime Minister Tony
Blair, has endured peace sermons from Archbishop of
Canterbury Rowan Williams,
whom he chose months ago to
head the Church of England.
The Bushes and Blair can
commiserate with former
Presiderll Clinton, who '!':as
re(J!;lltedly critici?.ed )Jy spo~s­
meri in his Southern Baptist
denomination. Baptist leaders
eventually called for him to quit
the presidency or be ousted by
Congre~s during the Monica

Lewinsky scandal. ·
What's unusual in the late~t ,
disagreement is that president{ ..
and ex-presidents rarely make .
comments about dissenting cler: ..
gy as pointed as those from the, .
elder Bush.
Bush insisted he understands
and respects those who oppose." '
war. He said what offended him :
was Griswold's statement to·,
Religion News Service that "!' c:I .
like to be able to go somewhere .
in the world and not have to, .
apologize for being from the .
United States" because the :,
nation is indifferent to human
suffering.
·
The bishop further accused
the administration of "reprehen"
sible" rhetoric and said "we are
hated.and loathed everywhere l .
go.
.
In response, Bush declared: "I
'do not - never have and never·
will - feel the need to apolo.- ·
gize for this great country."

..

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Monday

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the Quran says the Jews and
Christians altered or neglected some of God's words,
"incorporating factual inaccuracies and fabricating other .
messages into the Bible."
Islam believes these flaws in
the Bible made revelation of
the Quran necessary.
Green's introduction leans
toward the Muslim view by
stating that "the Gospels frequently contradict each other
and are sometimes inconsistent with historical fact."
Traditional Christian responses to the charge are ignored,
and Green never hints that
some raise questions about
Muslim traditiOns.
·
Though Green stresses
affinities, he pairs several
passages that unders
. core differences between Jesus and
Muharrunad.
Many more could have
been cited. For example,
Green quotes Jesus' teaching
of monogamous marriage in
Matthew 19:4-6 but not
Quran 4:3, which allows men
up to four wives.
Green's least satisfying
section, given its ~nence,
deals with "jihad, which in
Islam means "struggle" for
spiritual strength or justice
but can involve physical confrontation and, on occasion,
'~holy war."

Faith • Values

Lincoln Day Dinner

WHITMAN'S SAMPLER
147/o OZ, Only

Joey Green, author of 'Jesus
and
Muhammad:
The
Parallel Sayings,' published
by Ulysses Press. (AP)

Religion briefs
Son succeeds
father as
religious college
president

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Deaths
calder Core Jr.

Friday,Februacy7,2003

The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY - Calder Otis
Core . Jr., 73, Pomeroy, died
Friday, Feb. 7, 2003. .
Arrangements will be
announced by Fisher Funeral
Home.

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Local Briefs

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Den Dickerson
Publisher

Road closed

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

/,C/ters w tht" editor are welcome. They should be less than
JOO 11 ords. All letters are subject to editing and must be
signed and include address a11d telephon e number. No
tmsi1111ed letters will be published. Letters should be m good
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The opin ions expressed ht the column below are the conw
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unless othenrise noted.

POMEROY 0 Ohio
Department
of
Transportation announced
today that Ohio Route 143,
iust south of Township
Road 17 I, has an ongoing
one-lane closure due to a
partial culvert collapse.
ODOT District 10 Bridge
Engineer John Coen said
that the collapse was
caused by erosion underneath the structure. The
culvert project will be
repaired .m-house by
ODOT employees and IS
expected to take two to
thiee weeks to complete.

} '
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NATIONAL VIEW

.
..•••
'"o

Desperate
Taxman is taking a hungry ,
look at Internet purchases
• Houston Chronicle\ on taxing Internet purchases: It may now be t1me to loo'k ~pore closely
at the national moratorium on taxmg Internet
sa les.
While retailers a~e lamenting the ~ecent dismal
holiday seasQn, a fmaltaiiY. for e-tatler!', according to Bu s wes sWeek , showed onltne _s&lt;;tles
j_umped more than 20 percent to $9.8 btllton .
Unltne sales still make up less than 5 percent of
total holiday sales, but tfie rapid grow1h has not
escaped the attention of strapped governments.
Hou ston Mayor Lee Brown spoke of the issue
last week in discussing the city's multimilliondollar shortfall exrectea over tfie next two Y.ears
or more . Many o the city's proble!T)s, saia the
mayor, are tied directly to the slump m sales tax
revenues.
Texas, which relies heavily on sales tax, has
similar fiscal problems.
·
The growipg market share of the Inte.rnet grqws
!UOre f~mj)tmg to the tax man, who IS growmg
mcreasmgly aesperate.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WEST'S VIEW

·.

·'

An overseas calm that causes concern over here
Scotland Yard tells me (no kidding)
that the legendary police agency ~ill
neither confirm nor· deny an Australian
newspaper report saying that "chemical
warfare protection suits" were discovered during the recent' police raid on
London 's notorious Finsbury Park
mosque, home pulpit to terrorist-imam
Abu Hamza. According to lhe
Melbourne Herald Sun, Scotland Yard
and MIS detectives decided to withhold
the discovery of these nuclear, biological and chemical (NBC) suits - attire
not usually associated with even the
most exotic religious services - fearing it "would spark panic."
True report or false? Scotland Yard
officials are "not prepared to discuss"
the matter, which pretty much confirms
a hot little story that has gotten the cold
shoulder in Great Britain and beyond.
Meanwhile, it seems unlikely that more
reporting on what they really found in
the mosque - besides the stun gun, the
imitation rifle, the gas canister and all
the fake IDs- would cause an honestto-goodness panic. This is not to say
that perfectly normal cases of the jitters
wouldn't - and shouldn't - break out.
Still, as recent events make clear,
"panic" isn't the worst fate citizens of
the free world now grapple with.
In past days and weeks, there was the
British raid on a north London flat, a
hideaway for the deadly toxin ricin, that
lefl one British police detective stabbed
to death and, later, as many as a dozen
Islamic militants under arrest; there was
the dark-of-night Spanish sweep
through Catalonia that netted explosives, two barrels of as-yet unnamed
chemicals, and 16 mostly Algerian
Islamic militants, who, according to
reports, were not just (&gt;Ianning a terrorist attack, but were pOised to stage one.
There was also a lucky break last week
in Italy, · where police picked up five
Moroccans squatting in W1 abWldoned
farmhouse near Venice after finding a
couple pounds of explosives hidden, as

Toqay is Friday, Feb, 7, the 38th day of 2003.
There are 327 days left m the year.
Today ' s Highlight in History:
On Feb. 7, 1964, The Beatles beg~n their first
American tour as they arrived at New York's John F.
Kennedy International Airport.
On this date:
In 181 2h author Charles Dickens was born in
Portsmout , England. ·
In 1936, President Franklin Roosevelt authorized a
tlag for the office of the vice president.
In 1943, the government announced that shoe
rationing would go into effect in two days, limiting
consl)mers to buying three pairs per person for the
remamder of the year.
.
·
In 1944, during World War II, the Germans
launched a counteroffensive at Anzio, Italy.
In 1948, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower resigned as
Army chief of staff; tie was succeeded by Gen. Omar
Bradley.
·
In 1971 , women in Switzerland won the right to
vote.
Few laws are perfect. They CWl have
In 1983 Elizabeth H . Dole was sworn in as the
unintended consequences. They can, m
first female secretary of transportation by the first
real-life application, prove to be confu~­
woman to •.sit on the U.S. Supreme Court, Justice
ing. So there is often great benefit m
Sandra Day O'Connor.
tweaking certain laws to diminish their
ln 1984, space shuttl e as tronauts Bnice
weaknesses and bolster their strengths.
McCandless II and Robert L. Stewart went on the
Such is the case with Title IX.
first untethered space walk.
President Bush's secretary of education put together a IS-member commisIn 1986 Haitian President-for-Life Jean-Claude
Duvalier fled hi s country, ending 28 years of )lis ... sion to examine the 1972 law, which
family' s rule.
.
.
requires equal athletic opportunities for
girls
and women in federally funded
In 1999, Jordan's King Hussein died cif cancer at
education pro~ram s. The commission
age 63; he was succeeded by hi s eldest son ,
has been meeung through the fall and
Alxlullah.
winter and will present its recommenTen years ago : Commerce Secretary Ron Brown
dations
to the president by Friday.
acknow ledged on NBC 's "M eet the Press" that he' d
Women 's groups fear the commisfailed to pay Social S11c:urity taxes for a domestic
sion's
real purpose is td dismantle Title
worker over a number of years.
IX. Considering this pri:sident's record
Five Y.ears ago: The Winter Olympic Games
on women's issues, al011g with the fact
QPened in Nagano, Japan. It was announced that
he appointed an Wlti-affirmative action
Carl Wilson, a foundmg member of The Beach
conservative to oversee Title IX, the
Boys, had died in Los Angeles from complications
suspicion is understandable.
. of lung cancer; he was 51.
I believe, however, the women's
One year ago: Former Enron chief executive
groups will be proved wrong.
Jeffrey Skilling insisted to skeptical lawmakers that
There is no stronger supporter for
he knew of noihing improper about the complex web
Title IX lhan I am, but as essential as
o f partnerships tl\at brought down the company.
Jhe law has been in revolutionizing
Authorities in Oklahoma captured the last of four
women's sports, it has flaws . Its stanescaped pri son inmate s from Texas who'd been on
dards for compliance are subject to such
the run for more than a week .
wide interpretation that imposing sanctions on scofflaws has been nearly
Today's Birthdays: Country singer Wilm!! Lee
impossible. It has led too often to the
Cooper is 82. AI! thor G&lt;!Y Talese is. 71. Blues s1pgerunfortunate elimination of men's teams
mus1cian Earl Kmg IS 69. Actor Mtguel Ferrer IS 48 .
as schools struggle to equalize the numReggae musician Brian Travers (UB40) is 44. Actor
bers of male and female athletes.
.James Spader is 43. Country si nger Garth B_ro9ks is
Thus Title IX has been a lightning rod
11-1. Rock musician Dav1d Bryan (Bon Joyt) 1s 4! .
for controversy, pitting men 's athletics
Comedian Eddie Izzard is 41. Actor-comedian Chns
against women's . '
R ock is 37. Actor Jason Gedrick is 36. Actor Ashton
At the heart of the debate is a concept
Kutcher is 25. Actress Tina Majorino is 18.
called
proportionality. This is the mam
Thought for Today: "The time on either side of
standard by which schools show com' now' stand s fast. '' - Maxine Kumin, American
.
pliance.
It means that s~hool s must propoet.
Vide athletic opportumt1es m proportion

For the Record

He 's right. It is no peace at ~1, and it's . ·~
no future at all - although it happens •
very much to be our present. There is
tunnel vision on the Iraqi inspection .. ~
process, but not on actual Iraqi di.Sarma- '.•
ment; "making the case" . (as. thollgh '.•
President Bush were lawyer-in-chief) is . .
starting to seem more important than ,. (
· bringing the terror regime - and the ,
· ever-morphing terror networks that nng ,
- - - - - and overlap that regime ""- Jto. a ~
defanged state of harmlessness. Wh1ch • _
COLUMNIST
brings us to another modern mystery: •
why so many deny the link between the ::
the London Telegraph rather vividly war on Iraq and the war on Islamic ter- .. ,
reported, "in a sock amongst dirty rorism, even as these same people will . ~
underwear in a chest of drawers in the always predict the one will exa~erbate
kitchen ." A subsequent raid on a the other?
makeshift mosque in Vetpna UJ_~Covered
We may never nab a swab of bin · '
papers and maps markinlilhe s1te of the Laden DNA off Saddam Hnssein 's best :•
local cathedral and NATO' installation. china teacup - although who .knows .:
While Europe has been sl?.ared the what lies within those presidential ".;
death and devastation of j1had lhat palaces - but we can still connect Iraq ·
struck the United States 16 months ago to the Islamic terror networks, including .~
- and which strikes Israel continuous- . AI Qaepa. The mounting evidence now ·,;;
ly - close calls in the EU are getting includes Abu Massab Zarqawi: 'an AI
closer, and closer together. Panic, then, Qaeda weapons expert believed to.,hav·e· ,&lt;;
is the least of Europe's problems -or m;:tsterminded the Lol},(jol)t\~iWkllbf, qn~,:,,;
ours. Indeed, a good shot' bf Pmiic could the assassination of Amencan d1f.lomat ;!
be the salvation C?f the Western world.
Laurence Foley in Jor4an last fal . Bpt/},·;?- ·
I say th1s am1dst a surreal, almost these incidents came after the AI Qaeda ,, '
strangling wave of complacency t~at terrorist's medical sojourn in Baghqad, ·
has swept some of us- Fr~ce! leadmg where he was patched up after being .·~•
pemocrats, The New York T1mes - bad!
wounded in the Wi\f ill .1,
mto a never-never land of u~br.each~ble Af Ji' · ta
The New York Post , •
secunty where we have unhm1ted lime
g ams n.
, . ·
to debate and inspect; prepare and par- reports that t~e one-legged ~ord~ruan !s _
ley; bicker, march and wait. the ma~ President Bush ha~ m mu~d th1s ,.
Unfortunately, this land doesn't exist.
~eek m warnm~ the nai!On agamst a .. •
In his momentous alitl memorable day of horror hke none we ~ave .ev~r . : •
St;~te of the Union address, President known" should Sadd.am Hussel~,rem~n . ' j
BUsh laid out the Iraql'threat, which ~ree lo su~ply ~erronsts from h1s chem- ; ;
· ..
includes vast and unaccounted-for 1cal Wld bJOiogJcal stockp1le.
stores of anthrax botulinum toxin Wld
Will this news spark pWlic? At the " '
assorted nerve g~ses (and the rocket- very least, it should boost some pulse ···t
power required for delivery), . and rates - a condition vital to covtinued ::
explained the need to defend the peace. survival.
.
. ·
;:
As Mr. Bush put it, "A future lived at
(Diana West is a · columriist for The ~:
the mercy of terrible threats is no peace Washington Times. She can be contact· ';
at all."
ed'via dianaww@attglobal.net.)·
:;

Issued license
POMEROY - A marria~e .
license has been issued m
Me!lJs County Probate Court
to George R McCoy m, 26,
and Cynthia Ann Sroufe, 25,
both of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.

Diana

West

Meigs
County Court
POMEROY - Numerous
cases have been resolved
recently in the court of Meigs
County Court Judge Steve
Story. This list was released
by the Court this week.
Douglas S. Lowe, Vincent,
Speed, $30 Wld costs; Leah
Wilde, Huntington, W.Va.,
Speeding, $50 and costs;
Brian K. Steele, Marietta,
Seatbelt, $30 Wld costs; John
K. Aiker, Jr., Albany,
Scatbelt, $30 and costs;
Matthew C.
Kneipper,
Pomeroy, Possessing a
loaded firearm at illegal time
during hunting season, $60
and costs.
Dannie! Riffle, Pomeroy,
Contributing to the delinquency of a minor, $50 Wld
costs, Six months jail suspended, 1 year probation;
Ivan Powell, Racine, Driving
Under Suspension, $400 and
costa, 30 days jail suspended
to 10, 2 years probation: Matt
A. Elbin, Rutland, Shoot at
Deer
Facsimile,
from
Roadway, $220 Wld costs; No
Deer Permit, $1 ~ and costs,
1 year probation on all
chqes.
-Brandy J. Graham,
Pomeroy,
Reckless
Operation, $100 and costs,
three day RTP School; James
Hawley,
Pomeroy,
Contributing to the delin·
quency of a minor, $SO Wld
costs, Six months jail suspended, 1 year Jlrobation;
· John T. White, Coolville,
· Domestic violence, $100 and
costs, 30 days jail 'suspended,
one
year
probation,
Restraining Order; Joshua D.
Weaver, Syracuse, DUI, $8SO
and costs, 10 days jail suspended to three, Six month
license suspension, 1 year
probation, jail Wld $500 suspended upon completion of
RTP school.
·
Craig Belcher, Middleport,

1

•

Improving impeifections in Title IX regulations
·

..,.L l
.

'~·.·

~-~
.•..

.It&amp;..·'!' !'-.

...

'

? ..

'

Joan
Ryan

·

COLUMNIST

to each gender's overall enrollment on
can\pus. ·
.
Here's the problem for athletic directors: female enrollment is rising.
Women are expected to comprise 56
percent of undergt'll.duate enrollment by
2007. That means schools will have to
devote 56 percent of their athletic
opportunities to women.
This sounds fair on its face, but in
practice it sometimes makes for the artificial creation of women's teams - not
necessarily to meet a need but rather to
meet a prescribed number.
Surely ·there is a better way to define
"equ ~l," and that is the commission's
challenge, Commissioner Debbie Yow,
the University of Maryland athletic
director, suggested a flat 50-50 ratio
while allowing schools 5 or so percentage points of flexibility.
Ted Leland, commission co-chair Wld
athletic director al Stanford University,
suggested countin ~ opportunities rather
than actual participants. For example,
let's say there are 20 open slots on both
the men's and women's soccer teams.
Two women drop out right before the
season begins. Under some interpreta·
1

'-

·"'

tions of Title IX, two players would "1: .
have to be booted from the men's team: ~
Transcripts of the meetings •'
(www.ed.gov/inits/commissions- ''
boards/athletics/index.html) reflect a ···:
commission that appears committed to :~
protecting equity for girls and women,· · ·
This is not to say there weren't ·bad • '
ideas, like basketball player and co-· .. ,
chair Cynthia Cooper's proposal to base ·· ~
compliance on interest surveys. Thus, if ":
40 percent of women on ·campus ··;
expressed interest in participating in &gt;.
sports, the school would have to allocate only 40 percent of its athletic
opportunities to women .
Julie Foudy, the soccer player, imme- •
diately attacked the idea.
·•
"It reminds me of the days 'when: 1
women had to prove that they wanted to' ...
vote, that women had to prove that they •
wanted to own property, that women "'
had to rrove that they wanted to go to' ,•
medica school," she Said at the com- ·•
mission's Dec. 4 meeting.''
·•
"To have to prove that they are inter- •
ested to be afforded equal opportunity, •
in my mind, takes us back many years ." ,
Title IX is a powerful, essential law. ,
whose basic pnnciples should not be •
touched. But because of it~ flaws, it ha~ ,
also been a divisive scapegoat, a handy ,
target for those looking to blame all the
problems in college'sports on women . . :'
So before we attack the commission's ' '
recommendations, let's wait at least ..
until they are delivered to the president. •
What President Bush does with them , of •
course. is something else entirely.
•
(Joan Ryan is a columnist for the San •
Fran cisco Chronicle. Send comments to
her in care of this newspaper or send •
her
e·mail
at .•
)oanryan @~fchron icle. com.)·

The Daily Sentinel• Page AS

Independent board takes
over Columbia investigation
SPACE CENTER, HoUston ruil fuel tank and smashed into Gehman here. We need his
(AP)- An independent board the underside of Columbia's expertise."
named by NASA took the lead
of the Columbia investigation,
while officials at the space
agency stressed that they were
keeping an open mind abo\(t
what might have caused the
shuttle to break apart over
Texas.
"We have not ruled out any
possible cause," shuttle pro-,
gram manager Ron Dittemore
said Thursday, hours after an
independent investigation
board arrived at the Johnson
Space Center to start its work.
Dittemore had said earlier
that engineers were doubtful
about a once-leading theory
- that insulation slamming
into Iiles on Columbia could
have l)een the basic cause of
the shuttle's destruction. He
backed away from that conclusion Thursday.
He said the theory was still
being considered as part of the
"fault ttee" of possible causes
of the disaster.
"The foam that shed off the
tank and impacted the left
wing is just one branch, and
we are pursuing that," he said.
"Even though we scratch our
heads, we're going to pursue it
and we're going to pound it
flat"
Eighty-one seconds into
liftoff, a 20-inch, 2 1/2-pound
piece of foam insulation
peeled off the shuttle's exter-

left wing. It's thought the foam
A respected aerospace pubmay have damaged Iiles, lication reported Friday that an
allowing the 3,000-degree Air Force tracking camera
temperatures of re-entry to somewhere in the Southwest
superheat and weaken the captured
high-resolution
wing.
·
images of Columbia, taken
In an effort to blunt congres- about a minute before the
sional criticism of the NASA- shuttle broke apart, showing
appointed investigation board, serious sJructural damage to
space agency administrator the left wing near the fuselage.
Sean O'Keefe said Thursday
Aviation Week &amp; Space
that the board's charter had Technology cited sources
been modified to give the close to the investigation.
group more independence.
Lt. Kelly Jeter, a spokes·
0' Keefe said the move was · woman for Kirtland Air Force
based on the "hard, hard !ega- Base in New Mexico, coney" of lessons learned from fmned that the base turned
the 1986 Challenger accident . over photographs to NASA
that killed seven astronauts. A "One of our telescopes got
commission named by some shots of it going over,"
President Reagan to find the Jeter told The Associated Press
causes of that accident. late Thursday. She said NASA
released a report that was had instructed base officials
sharply critical of NASA man· not to comment further.
agement and safety practices.
Air Force Lt. Col. Rob
The Columbia investigation Koon said that the Air Force
board is headed by Adm, Hal turned over both still photos
Gehman, who led the probe and video to NASA. He gave
into the 2000 terrorist bomb- no details.
ing of the USS Cole in Yemen.
Kirtland has a high-resoluThe other seven members lion telescope that phoinclude four military officers, tographs satellites orb11ing
safety experts from the earth. The Starfire telescope
Department of Transportation can re.cognize features as
and the . director of NASA's small as one-foot long on a
Ames research center.
satellite 600 miles away, base
"Today, the investigation officials say.
enters a new phase,"
The Pentagon did not inun~­
Dittemore said Thursday. "It is diately return a call seeking
with relief I welcome Admiral comment early today.

Court News

l

RYAN'S VIEW

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohlo

Seatbelt, $20 and costs; violatiol\; $100 suspended $18 and costs; Teresa
Joseph Spurlock, EvWls, Wld costs; James Milliron, Blosser, Speed, $22 and
W.Va., Speed, $30 Wld costs; Racine, Seatbelt, $30 and costs.
Gregory E. Pullins, Racine, costs; Eric Ruddy, Albany,
Patricia Jones, Reedsville,
Seatbelt, $30 and costs, Speed, $30 and costs; Failure to yeild, $25 and
Failure to display valid regis- Michael J. Brown, · Racine, costs; William AUberry,
!Cation; $20 and costs; David Fail to control; $20 and costs; Stockport, Speed, $30 and
E. Rutter, Tuppers Plains, Susan M. Bond, Athens, costs; Andrew Martin,
Speed $30 Wld costs, Seatbelt Expired License, $25 "and Rutland, Speed, $30 and ·
$30 and costs; Wendi R.. costs, Seatbelt, $30 and
Miller, Pomeroy, Window costs; JonathWl D. Grueser, costs; Maksimov Angelon V,
Tint, $20 and costs.
Pomeroy, Unlawful sexual Mason, $50 and costs; Larry
Norma
Ratliff, conduct .with a minor, $100 Bailey, . Pomeroy, Seatbelt,
Middleport, Possession, $50 suspended to $50 and costs, $30 and costs; Robert Barker,
suspended, costs; Stephen C. 30 days in jail suspended, 2 Ostrander, Speed, $30 and
Vansickle,
Pomeroy, years probation, restraining costs; Jodie Bell, Lancaster,
Reckless Operation, $100 order; Don Nye, Pomeroy, Speed, $30 and costs; Dana
and costs, 2 years probation, Unlawful sexual conduct Blumenauer,
Pomeroy,
Marked lanes, $100 and with a minor, $100 suspend- Assured Clear Distance, $20
costs; Thomas Basum, ed to $50 Wld costs, 30 days and costs; Marie Boggs,
Pomeroy, Domestic violence, jail suspended, 2 years proba· Rutland, Strip sign, $20 and
$100 suspended, costs, 10 tion, Restraining order.
costs;
Zachary
Bolin,
days jail suspended to three,
Gerald W. Howard, Jr. Rutland, Speed, $30 and
2 years probation.
Albany, Driving Under FRA costs;
Robert
Booth,
Lara L. Priddy, Pomeroy, suspension (insurWlce), $200 Charleston, $30 and costs;
Seatbelt, $30 and costs; and costs, 3 days jail sus- Scott BrWlnon, Albany, Stop
Donald S. Whitt, Waverly, pe~ded u~n proof ?f ~ valid sJ·gn, $20. Wld costs.
Seatbelt, $30 and costs; dnvers ·license w1thm 90
Estevan Smith, Aberdeen, days, I year probation, passRebecca
Brown,
Speed, $30 and costs; ing of the right, $25 and Stockport, Speed, $30 and
Amanda
M.
Hannah, costs; Karen S. Brookhart, costs; Ronald Caner, Grover
Lucasville, Warren Shurkey, Pomef()y, Speed, $20 and City, $30 Wld costs; Noah
South Charleston, W.Va., costs; Timothy T. Thomas, Jr. Chasteen,
Middleport,
Transporting. a loaded Portland, Speed, $20 and · Failure to control, $20 and
fuearm, $100 and costs, 1 costs, Possession, $50 and costs; Larry Chatfield,
year probation, Aid in shoot- costs, Drug paraphenalia, Westerville, Speed, $30 and
mg deer Facsimile, costs; $SO and costs; Aaron costs; DWliel Clark, Albany,
Zachary M. Shorkey, South Camino, Coolville, DUI, Seatbelt, $30 and costs; Tony
Charleston, W.Va., Shoot at $8SO and costs, I 0 days jail Cochran, Point Pleasant,
deer facsimile, $100 and suspended to 3, 6 month Speed,
40 and costs,
costs, 1 year probation, license suspension, 1 year Seatbelt, $30 Wld costs.
Transport a loadea fii'Carm, probation, Driving under sus$100 Wld costs, 1 year proba- pension, $200 Wld costs, 3
April
Cornelius,
·lion.
days Jat
· 'I' !;ear probation • Charleston,
Speed,
and
·
v·tctor C$30
t
John A. VanReeth, Belpre, Speed, $2
and cost, costs;
oun se,
Speed, $30 and costs, Jamie Seatbelt, $30 and costs.
Pomeroy, Speed, $30 and
T. Terzopplous, Middleport,
Christopher
Lance, costs; Curtis Cox, Gallipolis,
Drivins under FRA suspen- Pomeroy, DUI, $850 and Assured clear distance, $20
sion (Insurance), costs 27· costs, 10 days jail suspended and
costs;
Todd
days in jail, two yean proba· to three, Six month license Cunningham, Huntersville,
tion, vehicle forfeited, ficti- suspension, I year probation, Speed, $30 and costs; Chad
tious tags, costs only; Toby jail and $500 suspension Diddle, Racine, Right-ofCurtis, Middleport, Filii to upon completion of RTP way/Public Highway, $24
Control, $SO and costs, Seth school, seatbelt, $30 and and costs; Duddek, Jeffrey,
E. Martin, SWldyville, W.Va., costs.; P~illip Wetzel, New Haven, Speed, $30 Wld
Seatbelt $30 and costs.
Albany, Flitlure to control,
Da~id C. Milliron, · $100 and costs; Paula Roush, costs; David Edwards,
Sealbelt, $30 and costs, Mason, Reckless operation, Powell, Seatbelt, $30 and
Fictitious Tags, $100 sus- $100 and costs; Mark A. costs; Karl Falk, Erie, Pa.,
pended to $50 Wld costs, Title Blair, Speed, Ravenswood, Speed, $30 and cosls.

s

Mayor
from PageA1
centrate on being a speed trap,"
he said.
According
to
ClerkTreasurer Susie French,
Middleport mayor's court collects an average of $40,000 in
fees each year.
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli said
she personally feel s a strong
obligation to serve the CO!Il1JlUnity as the presiding officer of
the court.
She said she has settled
many disputes between friends
and neighbors and has hopefully made the community a better
place.
"I feel that at the present
lime, I can do fine," she said.

Dentist
from PageA1
University's dental staff, to
actively recruit a new dentist to operate the clinic,
although dentists are in
short supply across the
nation.
The clinic served 914
patients last year.
"If the clinic is going to
continue to operate, it must
be as soon as possible,"
Dav.enport said. "Time is of
the essence in this situation,
because that money can be
reassigned to another county
or another project if a dentist is not in place."
Davenport said dental ser·
vices are required as part of

Picket
from PageA1
office has been possibly dis·
connected.
Doors to the HighlWlders
office were locked Thursday
afternoon and phone calls to
the office FndaL morning
were unsuccessfu . A .record-

"When they come for a hearing, I am open-minded and lislen to what they tell me."
lannarelli said she does thorough research into each case
and is careful to uphold the law.
Like a nicer version of Judge
Judy, the mayor said she gives
speeches to wrongdoers.
"I try to help out, but I also
try to be a little hard," she said.
"If I can be here and help out
some of these people, then it is
wonh it to serve on mayor's
court."
The mayor models herself
after her late father, David
Ohlinger, who was a Mei~s
County deputy sheriff. She srud
he was fair to everyone he
arrested and worked within the
coun system.
His mono was, "there's good
in everybody, you just have to
look for it."
a
Fairly-Qualified
Community Health Center, a
facility planned for Veterans
Memorial Hospital if federal
funding is approved. A grant
application is due for that
proposal later this month.
"An Appalachian Dental
Clinic like ours fills the
requirement set forth for the
community health center,"
Davenport said, "so it's
even more important that we
do what we can to get a dentist here to operate the clinic.''
The clinic has operated in
the Jones Memorial Clinic
building in Middleport until
it was closed, and the health
departmem used pan of the
grant award in 200 I to purchase equipment and install
a dental laboratory in the
building.

ing stated telephone service
had been disconnected.
Sines said the picket which has the support of the
international union - will
continue until BWlnai begins
to live up to the collective
bargaining a~reement he
signed last Apnl.
"If he'll continue to give us
the resources, everything will
be OK," Sines said. 1

Cubans defect to Florida
MIAMI (AP) - Four Cuban spokeswoman

Cynthia
coast guardsman defected Edwards said. One man had a
Friday, docking their patrol boat Chinese handgun holstered to
at a Key West resort, walking his side, which he allowed
into town and surrendering to a Dorgan to take.
police officer, authorities said.
Officers searching their boat
The men, dressed in their mil- docked at the Hyatt Marina
ilary uniforms, approached Resort found two loaded AK.-47
Officer Matt Dorgan at about 4 . machine guns along with
a.m. and told him they wanted , ammunition. The boat was still
to surrender, Key West police . flying a Cuban flag.

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TUesday, February 11, 1003
8:00 p.m. Game nme
Home National Bank pays all admission!

* Four Cash Drawin2s *

~

Valerie Valentine; faculty/staff and former ·
stUdents will be present to discuss this ,
Associate Degree option. 'A cohort may be
s~ at Meigs i.( enough interest is shown.

•

~-

Racine

Syracuse

740-949-2210 740-992-6333

�Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel
161 Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy, 992 -5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz

Sat. Con. 4:45-S: ISp.m.: Mas&amp;- S:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,

Church of Jesus Ch rilt ApottoHc

,

VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor: JlllJ'Ie s Miller
Sunday S\.: huol - IO:JO a.m.
E ~·~ nin g -

Pastor: P.J. Chapmllll

Wonhip - 9:30a.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Woohip - II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - I 0:30a.m.
First Sunday of Month · 7:00 p.m. service

Sun. MKH - 9:30 a.m.
Dailey Mau - 8: 30a.m.

TUppen Plaint St. Pllul

Pastor. Jane Bu uie

( 'hurrh or ( ' hri~l

Pastor: Rev. Jacl:. Nollie
Worship 10:25 a.m.
Sunday ScN;Jo19:15 a.m.

Mini ster: Larry Brown
Worship -9: 30 a.m.
Sunday School - I 0:30a.m
Bible Study - 1 p.m.
Pomeroy Church ot Christ
212 W. Main S1.
Mini ster: Anthon y Morri s
Sunday S~h uo l - 9:30a.m.
Worshi p- 10:_,0 tl .m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesda)' Se r vkt:~- 1 p.m.

Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernade Inc.
l oop Rd off New Lima Rd Rutland
Sef"\oices: Sun 10:00 ;un. &amp; 7:JO p.m..,
Th urs. 7:UO p.m
Pastor Marty R. Huth.:m

Hope Baptist Churth (Southern)

.'i70 Grant St .. Middlepon
Pastor: Re v. David Bl)'an
Sunday schoo l - 9:30 a.m.
Won;hip- II a. m. and 6 p.m
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

326 E. Main St., Pumeroy
Rev. Jame!l Hemaclti. Rev. Katharin m ter
Sunday School and
Holy Euchari st II :00 a.m.

llulim·~.,
Commualty Church
Pmstor: Steve Tomek
Main 'Street, Rutland
Sunday Worship--1 0:00 a.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.
Danville HoliDtSS Cburth
31057 State Route 325, Langsvll e
Pa~tor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship - 10 :30 a. m. &amp; .1 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Firsl Rapllsl
Pastor l oo Brockert
East Main St.
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wof!l hip - 10: 30 a.m.

Hanisunville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenz ie
SunWy S~ hool 9 : 30 a.m.
Won:.hip - II a.m., 7:f'IOp.m
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Bearwalluw Ridg:e C hun:h of Chrisl
Pastor:Bruce Terry
Sum.la)' School -9:30 a.m.
Wo~ hip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p. m.

Fin1 Southern Baptist

R08l! or Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd., Rutl and
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednel&gt;day prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Zion Church or Christ
Pomeroy, Harri son\·ille Rd. (Rt.\ 43 )
Pas tor: Roger Watson
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Servi ces - 1 p.m.

4 1872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O' Bryam
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:15a.m., 9:45 am &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wt!dnesday Services - 7:00 p.m.
Flrsl Baplisl Churth
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School - 9: I 5 a.m.
Worshi p - 10: 15a.m., 7:00p.m.

Pine Groove Bible Holiness Church
l f2 mile off Rt. 32.'i
Pastor: Rev. O ' Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servke - 7:30p.m.

Tuppers Plain Church ofChrit t

Instrumental
Wors hip Service · 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:15 a.m.
Youth- 5:30 pm Sunday
Bible Stud y Wednesday 7 pm

Wednesday ServiL-e- 7:00 p.m.
Racine Jo'irst Blplist
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School - SUO a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m.. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00 p.m.

Bradbury Church or Chrisl
Minister: Tom Runyon
39558 Bradbury Road. Middlepon
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Silver Run Dapllsl
Pa!;tur: John Swanson
Sunday Sc hool - IOa. m.
Worship - ! I a. m.. 7: 00 p. m.
Wedne ~day Services - 7:00p.m.

Rutland Church of Christ
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a. m., 7 p.m.
Bradford Church of Chrisl
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00 p.m.

Wesleyan Bible HoUaess Church
7.'i Pearl St., Middle pon.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship - 9:30p.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p. m.
Hy~~ell

Run Holiness Church
Rev. Mark Mk:hael
Sunday School - 9:30 ia.m.
Worship · 10:45 a. m., 7 p. m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.
Laurel Oitr Free Metbodlsl Church
Rev. Les Strandt and My ra L. Strandt
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednciiday Service - 7:00p.m.

l.altl'r-l&gt;al Sainh
The Chun!h or JtaUR

Hll::kory Hlllll Churth or Christ
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday Schoo l - 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Christ ot Latter-Day Saints

St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or446-7486
Sunday School 10:20- 11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood II :0~ - 12 : 00
0000

S~~erament Service

Old Bethel F... Wlll)lapllst Cbun:h
28601 St. Rt_y,Middleport
Sunday Sc hoOl - 10 a. m.
Evening • 7:00 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7:00

9-10:1.5 a.m.

Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

I ullwrau
St. John Lutheraa Chun:h

Hillside Baptisl Churtb
St. Rt.1 43 justoffRt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Wo l"!lhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rvices -7 p.m.

Pastor: Philip S turm ~
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wedne!lday, 6:30 p.m.

VIctory Baptisllndependent
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon
Pas tor: James E. Keesee
Worship - IOa.m.. 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Dnter Churth of Chrisl
Pastor: Bill Eshelman
Sunday school 9:30 a.m.
Norman Will , superintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

Faith Baptist Chun:h
Railroad St.. Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wors hip - II u.m.. 6 p.m.
Wedne:sday Serv ices - 7 p.m.

Church or Christ

Rftdn-llle Churth or Christ

Inte rsection 7 and 124 W
Evangelist: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study - 9:30 a.m.
Wunhip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study • 7 p.m.

Forest Run Baptist

Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - I I a.m.

Ch ri'l ian I niou
Hartford Ch•rch ol' Christ In
Chrktlan Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:David Greer
Sunday School · 9:30 a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7: 00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Foorth &amp; Main St., Middlepon

Pas1or: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Anl&amp;qulty Baptht
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:4~ a.m.
Sunday E11ening- 6:00 p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas

Church of Cod
MI. Mor-Iah Chun:h of God
Mile Hill Rd .. Racine
Pn.~tnr: James Satterfield
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p. m.

Rutland Fret Will Baptist
Salem St.

Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesdu)' Serv ices- 7 p.m.

t-~

Pine Grove

Syracust First Church or God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Ru ssell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a. m.
Evening Services - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi ce~ - 6:30p.m

/

( 'alholir

Our Sariour Lutheran Churc:b
Walnul and Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Wol'lihip • II a.m.

SL Paul Lutheran Chun:h
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., PomeTO)'
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m
Worship • II .a.m.

! nitl'd \ll'lhodi't
Grth• United Methodist
WorshiP - 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service · 7:30 p.m.

Mt. OUve United Methodlat
Off I 24 behind Wilkesville
Pastor. Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
ThuDday Services- 7 p.m.

Meigs Coopel'llldvt Parish

Pastor: Rob Brower
Sund lly Sc hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - II :oo a.m
Pu tor. Bob Robinson
Sunday Sch ool - 9 a.m.
Worship --10 a.m.
Pari Chapel
Sunday Sch ool - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Pomeroy
Pasmr: Rod Brower
Worship - 9:30a.m
Sunday School- 10:35 a. m.
Rock Sprinp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School ~ 9:15 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship. Sunday - 6 p.m.
Rutt.nd
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Won hip • \(}. 30 • .m.
Thun;day Servicei - 7 p.m.

Salem Center
Pasror: William K. Marshall
Sunday Sc~ool - 10: 15 s. m. ·l!
Worship - 9:1.5 a.m.
J.P;.
Bible Study: Monday 7:00 pm )(;

Pastor:.Jane Beattie
Sund&amp;)' School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- I I a.m., 6: 30p.m.
ChHter

Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship - 9 a. m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Th.ursday Services - 7 p.m.
Jopp&amp;
Paslot: Bob Randolph
Wurship • 9:3011.111.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Lon1 Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Reedsfllle

Bethany

Brogan~ Warner

·

216 E. Second Pomeroy
740.992·3325
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Since

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214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

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White Funeral Home
Since 1858
t~tee~t-"a-t ~(Uit,e
9 Fifth Street
174 Layne Street
New Haven, WV 25265
Coolville, Ohio
James H. Anderson
740·667-311 0
Licensed Director Fax:

'1

Pstor: Herschel W9ite
Sunday School- 10 am
Sunday Church Sl! fVi ce - 6:30pm
Wednesda)' 7 pm
Restoration Chrlsdan Fellow1hlp
9365 Hooper Road, Athens
Pastor: Lonnie Coats
Sunday Wor:;hip I0:00 am
Wednesday: 7 pm

The Bellnen' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd.. Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Maraaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday. 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30P.m.

i

Full Gospel
Pastor: Robert Mu sser
Sunday School 9:30·am,
Worship 10:30 am -7:00pm
WedllC$day Service 7:00 pm

Paator: Theron Durham
SUnday • 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

..

.,.

Middleport Community Churtb
S1S Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

Mornl"' Star
Pastor: Dewaync Stutler
Sunday School · lt a.m.
Wonhlp • I0 a. ml'

~ ...'~

Lanpville Chriltian Churth

HarriloovtUe Community Church

i

.

Pastor:. .d;.,;•IM•~ ......~. . ..,.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsflip • 9 a.m .
Wedn~m.
.._

Ptnleoo~tal Atlembly

St. Rt. -124, kine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedne!fday Services • 7 p.m. -

,:@.ye, RWI Rood
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 1 p.m.
s,_~U.Ion

Pastor: Brian Hatkness
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - I t a.m
Wednesday 7 p.m.

S)'r&amp;CUie Flnt United Pftsbyteri•n
Pastor: Robert Crow
Worship · II a.m.

Harrison"llle Presb)'terlan Churtll

Coolville United Mothodbt l'llrilb
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Oturch
Main ~ Fifth St.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 9a.m.
\N
1\lesday Services. 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rober Crow,
Worship - 10 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

· "tbtl Cllurch

Morse Chapel Churth

Sue..h-Day AdYentist
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastnr: Roy La winsk)'
Saturday Services:
Sat.bath School - 2 p.m.
w. sh" 3

Sunday school • lO a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wedne!iday SerVice • 7 p.m.

Fallb Gosptl Church
HocldDJPOI'( Chun:b

Long Bottom

Grand Street
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Worship • II a.m.
Wednesday Serv ices - 8 p.m.

'

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4.'i a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

'c o. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
w, h' ' 030

'

! ·uill'd Bn•lhrl'n

MI. Olive Communll)' Chufth
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening~ 6:30p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

Torth Church

Mt. Hermon Uniltd Brethrtft
In Chrisl Churth
Texas Community 3641 1 Wickham Rd · ~
Pastor: Roben Sanders
Sunday Sc hool · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00 p.m.

Full Gospel LJahdaouse
3~04:5

Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
1\lesday &amp; Thursday - 7:30p.m.

Middleport Church of the Naz.rene
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday c;ervices - 7 p.m.
Syracuae Church ol the Nuarene
Pastor Mike Adkins
. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

.

State Route 124, Reedsville
'
Pastor: Rev. Bill Duty
. Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.in. ;
Wedn e$day Services • 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service - 7:00 p.m.•

Freedca Gospel Mil!ilon
BaJd Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Willford

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'"So I strive always to keep

"Let your light so shine before
men, rha r rhey may see your my conscience clear before
good works and glorify your God and man."'
Father in Heaven. "
Acts 24:
Matthew 5: 16

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

lt"TDUI

GLOUSTER - Behind a solid
team effort and 24 Morgan Weber
points, the Eastern Eagles proved
their frrst win over Trimble wasn't
just a stroke of luck.
The Eagles flew into Trimble-town
and soared out with a 65-59 Tri·
Valley Conference victory over the
Lady Tomcats in White Gymnasium,
a feat that few teams have been able
to accomplish this season.
The win gives Eastern a tie for second place with Trimble at 6-4 for the
runner-up spot in the Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division. That

comes after Waterford and Southern
tied for the league championship in
the Hocking Division of the league
with identical 8-2 marks. Eastern is
12·8 overall~
"This was another good solid win
against a very good opponent," said
Eastern mentor Rick Edwards. "We
played very well tonight, and everyone once again contributed and
played their role... We shot the ball
very well from the line, something
we have not done very well this
whole year. This win was a total
team effort."'
"I am really proud of our girls,
Trimble cut it to one on a put back
and foul shot by Faires late in the
game and the girls really were deter-

mined not to let thi s one slip away."
Trimble dropped from early league
leader to out of the running with several recent losses. Many were attributed to the loss of swing guard Julie
Trace, a talented freshman Southpaw
who broke her hand three weeks ago.
Trace returned, however, Thursday
night to score 12 points and Eastern
still managed to claim the road victory.
In a nip and tuck battle between
opposing players, Eastern's Morgan
Weber and Trimble freshman standout Jennifer Grandy traded buckets in
a healthy battle to help establish their
teams. When the battle was done,
Weber and Grandy shared game-high
honors with 24 points each. Weber

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) Relieved Marion Jones is
leaving the coach who gave
Ben Johnson steroids, track
and field's ruling body now
wants her l&gt;oyfriend and
Tim
sprint
champion
Montgomery to do the same.
Jones, her golden image at
risk, said she is regretfully
ending her relationship with
Charlie Francis. So far,
Montgomery has not commented on whether he would
continue to work with the
coach.

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992-6376

-.

Fish to make
singles debut
ZAGREB, Croati-a (AP)Mardy . Fish will make his
Davis Cup singles debut in
opening the U.S. team 's
World Group matches against
Croatia on Friday.
Fish will play Ivan
Ljubicic, followed by the
Americans' most experienced
member-, Jame s Blake,
against Mario Ancic.
Fish and Blake were also
nominated to play the doubles on Saturday, and the
reverse singles Sunday.

Pierce loses in
Indian Open
HYDERABAD, India (AP)
- Mary Pierce was weakened by a throat infection and
lost in the Indian Open quar·
terfinal s, beaten by Flavia
Pennetta 7-6 (4), 6-3.
Also,
second-seeded
Tamarine Tanasugarn defeat·
ed qualifier Maria Kirilenko,
Akiko Morigami. ranked No.
128, downed eighth-seeded
Silvija Talaja, and fifth-seeded Iroda Tulyaganova beat
Tzipi Obziler.

went home the winner.
Weber led the. Eagles and helped
lift her teammates to victory. Behind
Weber 's effort was an 11-point, 11 rebound effort from Katie Robertson
who scored a double-double in a
great effort of her own. Jennifer
Hayman added II points, Alyssa
Holter added eight, Krista White five,
and Jess Hupp six .
Behind Grandy's effort, junior
Allory Hooper notched 14 points,
Julie Trace 12, Hannah Faires seven,
and Penny McClelland two .
With a great defensive stand,
Eastern once again established itself
earl y. Opposing teams will never

Please see Eastern, Bl

Marauders ground . :
Rockets SQ-39
··

College basketball

ST. MORITZ, Switzerland
(AP) - Bode Miller of the
United States captured his
first major title, winning the
gold medal in the combined
at the world championships.
Norwegians Lasse Kjus
and Kjetil-Andre Aamodt
won the silver and bronze in
the combined. Kjus and
Aamodt both have a record·
tying II medal s at the world
championships. matching the
total of Marc Girardelli of
Luxembourg.

Edtn Unlled Brtthrtn In Christ : .: .

SoutJt Btthel Community Churth
Silver Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship Service 10 a.m.
Carlclon Inttrdenomlnallonal Churth
King&amp;bury Road
Pastor: Raben Vance
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wo1'5 hip SCrvice I0:30 a.m.
Evening SerVice 6 p.m.

· ReedsviUt Fellowship

Sports correspondent

. ..

BY JtM SOULSBY
Sports correspondent

POMEROY
Overcoming a slow start the
Meigs Lady Marauders
defeated the Wellston Lady
Rockets at Meigs High.
School Thursday night by a
50-39 margin.
.
The win is the fourth in a
row for the Marauders as
they complete TVC play
with a 5·5 mark.
The Marauders (6-13)
grabbed the lead late in the
first period and Jed the rest
of the way in downing the
Rockets. With her team

trailing 4-2 with le ss thah
two minutes left in the op¢1h
ing frame, Samantha Pierre
nailed back to back tliree:
point shots in a span of· 28:
seconds. Pierce would go on
to score a team high 20
points for the Marauders as
the sophomore broke the: 20
barrier for the third time in
the last four games. Jaynee
Davis and Justine Dowler
each added a late bucket to
end the first quarter wiili
Meigs on top 12-4.
·
Alex Massey who led the
Rockets with a 20-point
elfon k~pt her team in the

Please see Melp. B2

Boys and girls tourney
..~~~.ings decided
Meigs County
takes home top
seeds
BY ScOTT WoLFE

Middleport Presb)'terian

DyavDie Community Church

Township Rd .. 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

.BY SCOTT WOLFE

Jones leaving
her coach

Pastor: Robert Crow
Worship : 9 a.m.

Huel Community Church
OffRt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunda)' School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Miller earns
first major title

Eastern proves win over Trimble not just luck

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif.
(AP) - Kevin Sutherland
___ , sho,. a 6-UI\der 66 for a onestroke lead over Mike Weir
and Robert Gamez in the frrst
round of the Pebble Beach
National Pro-Am.

l'rl'slll ll'rian

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike TbomJl'On,Pastor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

CHICAGO (AP) - As fas·
cinating as the U.S. Olympic
Committee's constant squabbles and scandals are, its
members really would like to
get back to their normal business.
Like winning medals.
Making sure U.S. athletes
have the resources and facilities they need. And getting
ready for an Athens
Olympics that is a mere 18
months away.
But they're going to have
to find a way out of their latest mess first. The USOC
executive committee is hoping that cleanup will start at a
meeting Saturday, as the
search begins for yet another
new president.

Prep basketball

Sutherland
leads at Pebble
Beach Pre&gt;Am

I 'l·nlel·&lt;,, I a I

Faltll V.U.J'I'IIbornaelt Chur&lt;h

992-5432

t!J:eaforb
l\eal Qfstate

Full line of

·(

Pastor: Dewaync Stutler
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m. ·
Wednesday Services • 10 l.m.

992-3785
NCE

Hobson Christian Fellowship Churth

Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed .
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednc!lday - 1 p.m.
Friday · fellowshi p service 1 p.m.

Blessed are the pure. ll"NNI~;famltyRestaurant
in heart,· fior the"
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Chlefcen"
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Pomeroy

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Rejolclna Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Mike FMeman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Faith FuU Gooptl Chur&lt;h

Sunday School· 10 a. m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

Carmel-Sultan
Cannel &amp; Basban Rds .
Racine, Ohio
Pu tor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4.5 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

·

Bethel Worship Center
Chester School
Pastor: Rob Barber
Assistant Pli.stor: Karen Davis
Sunday Worship: 10 am
Clifton Tabtmacle Church
Evening Worship: 6 pm
Clifton, W.Va.
Youth group 6 pm
Sunday
School - 10 a.m
Wednesday: Power in Prayer
Won;hip
- 7 p. m.
and Bible Study - 7 pm
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.
Alih Slreet Chuf'('h
Ash St., Middleport· Pastor: Glenn Rowe
New Life Victory Center
.
Sunday School-9:30 a.m.
Morning Worship - I 0:30 a.m. &amp; 7 pm 3773 Georges Creek Road, Gall ipolis, OHPastor. Bill Slaten
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.
Sunday St:rvices - 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Youlh Service- 7:00p.m.
Wedn esday - 1 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.
AK&amp;pt Ufe Ceater
"Full-Gospel Church"
Full Gospel Church of the Livlns Savior
Pastors JQhn &amp; Patty Wade
Rt. 338. Antiquity
603 Secund Ave. Mason
Pastor: Jesse Morris
713-.5011
Services: Saturday 2:00 p. m.
Se rvice time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wedne!lday 7 pm
Salem Community ChuR"h
Lieving
Road, West Columbia, W.Va.
Abundant Grace R.F. I.
Pastor: Clyde Fenell
923 S. Thitd St., Middkport
School 9:30 am
Sunday
Pastor Teresa Davis
Sunday evening !lefVice 6 pm
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service 7 pm
Wednesday Sl!r.vice, 7 p.m.

Mlnenovllle

Snowvillt

Pastor: Wayoe R . Jewell
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.ni.
Thursday - 7:00p.m.

Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor. Michael Duhl
Sunday S~h ool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship . I 0:30a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p. m.

Healh (Middleport)

Calnry Bible Chun:h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m .• 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service , 7:30 p.m.

Sdversville Community Chun:b :

Commulllly or Chris1

Alfred

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

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

'ai&lt;JI'l'lll'

Northeast Cluster

Churth of God or Prophet)'
O.J. Whitt Rd . off St. Rt. 160

Sacred Heart Calhollc Church

( &gt;tlll'r ( ' hurrht''

Forest Ibm

::. yli~ '?),J; !Ijl"'.r :"'

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

Rutland Church or God
Pas10r: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship · 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sftond Bapllsl Church
Rave nswood, WV
Pa.~ t or : David W. McClain
Sunda)' Schoo l 10 amMorning w1xship II am Evening 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Pastor: William Ju s1is
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunda)' Service · 6:30 p.m.

nMtWood5

USOC tries to
end turmoil ·

F11ilh l!'ellowshlp Crusade for Christ
.Pastor: Rev. Frankli n Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Portland First Chun:h of the Nazartne

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wol"!lhlp - ll a.m.

Friday, February 7, 2003

Letart, W.Va. Rt. I
Pa~or: Brian May
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor5hip - 7 :00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m. .

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won.hip. 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wedne!&gt;day Services- 1 p.m.

Enttrprise
Pastor: Arland Kin g
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wofship . 9 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:30

Page Bl

Fainiew Bible C1nm:h

Rutland Chun:b ollhe Naurene
Pastor: Rev. Louis S. Staubs

Grate l!:piscopll Church

Worship - 9:30 a. m.
Sunday S~h oo l - 10:30 a. m.
Pastor-Jdfrey Wall ace
I stand 3rd Sunda y

Sunday S&gt;:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worshi p · I 0:45a.m.

Pastor: Bob Robinson

Worship - II a.m.

Keno Church nf Chr-lsl

Rutla.id Fint ·Baptist Church

Asbury (Syracuse)

Wednesday Service&amp;- 7:30 p.m.

Middleport Chu rch of Christ
.5th and Mai n
Pastor: AI ~l artSQn
Youth Minister: Bill Fnu:ier
Sunday School - 9:.\0 a.m.
WOOihip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wedn esday Services - 7 p.m.

Baptist

Central Cluste r

•

Chapel Wesleyu
Coolvill e Road
Pastor. R~v . Phill ip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

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

TUesday Services · 7:30 p.m.

Scoreboard, Page 83

While'~

Chesler C hurch of the Naurtne

· Worship - 10 a.m.

Sunda)' School - 9 :4.'i a.m.

Pomeroy We!ibide Church of Cbrisl
33226 Children's Home Rd .
Sunday S~.:hool . It a.m.
Worship - 1Oa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices- 7 p.m.

Llbeny Assembl y or God
P.O. Box 467, Duddi ng Lane
Mason, W.Va·.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sun day Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Bethlehem B•ptisl Chun:h
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine , OH
Pastor : Dmiel Mecea
Sunday School - 9: 30 a.m.
Sunday Worship · 10: 30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00 p.m

Trinity Cb•rd!.
Second It Lynn, Pomeroy

HemkM=k Grove Christblo Church

RJn r Vw.lley
A[Xlslnlic Wor~~ hip Center
873 S .'rd Avt:., Middlc:poo
Kevi n Konk le, Pastor
Sunday, 10 a. m. and 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; Youth Fri . 7:30 p.m.

ML Union Baptist
Pastor : David Wiseman
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening - 6: 30p.m.
, Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Pa!lror: Jan Lavemkr
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service• -7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.

7:30p.m.

Won hip- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church of tbe Nau rene

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Friday, February 7, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Sports correspondent

Ohio State's Erika Christenson, right, passes the ball around Minnesota 's Kim Prince during
the first half Thursday in Columbus (AP)

Ohio State beats Minnesota.
COLUMBUS (AP) - For almost threeand-a-half minutes, the highest-scoring team
in the country couldn't even get a shot off.
It cost No. 15 Minnesota, as No. 25 Ohio
State used defense and athleticism to win 6658 Thursday night.
Minnesota rolled into town leading the
nation in scoring and shooting, averaging
almost SO points per game and shooting 53
percent.
But for 3 minutes and 26 seconds, the
Buckeyes (16-5, 7-3 Big Ten) locKed the
Gophers (16·4, 5-4 Big Ten) down.
Meanwhile, Ohio State was using its superior athleticism to get easy fast-break baskets
and blow the game open.

"We lost the game tonight in three minutes," Golden Gophers guard Lindsay ·
Whalen said.
Kim Wilburn and Courtney Coleman each
scored 18 points to lead Ohio State.
"I thought we · played a great first half;"
Minnesota coach Pam Borton said. "I
thought Ohio State played a great I0 minutes
there in the second half."
With the game tied at 39 with about 12
minutes to play, LaToya Turner, Coleman
and Caity Matter took over for the
Buckeyes.
Turner made two free throws and convertP I - see OSU, Bl

JACKSON -. Seeding
for the upcoming boys and
girls basketball tournaments
were recently set as voted
upon by area coaches during the recent tournament
draw conducted by the Ohio
High
School
Athletic
Association
Southeast
District Board.
Bracket pairings have
been
routinely
listed
throughout the week in The
Daily Sentinel. Tri-Valley
Conference schools claimed
all four top seeds.
In the girls pairings,
Southern (13·5) was voted
the tOJ? seed and will play
the w1nner of the MillerFranklin-Furnace Green
.game on Monday at Vinton
County High School at
6:15. Southern plays that
winner Thursday at Vinton
County at 6:15.
Waterford gained the
number two seed and will

play the winner of the South
Gallia-Crooksville game.
Trimble earned number
three seed and plays the
winner of the Symmes
Valley-Ironton St. Joseph
game, while Eastern (1 2-8)
earned the number four seed
and plays Beaver-Eastern at
8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 13 at
Vinton County. Eastern previously defeated Beaver,
Eastern at home in a regular
season game.
In the boys pamngs,
Symmes Valley (12-4)
gained the number one seed
and will play the TrimbleSouth
Gallia
winner
February 22 at Vinton
County. Southern ( 12-5),
still in contention for the
T. V.C. Hocking Division
title earned the second seed
and will play the MillerBeaver Eastern winner at 8
p.m. on Feb. 22 at Vinton
County.
Miller
plays
Beaver-Eastern on February
18.
Eastern (1 1-6) faces 7-8
Ironton St. Joe after earning
the number three seed. That
game will be played Feb. 21
at 8 p.m. foll owing the
number four seed South
Webster, I0· 5. Waterford
game at 6: 15 the same
night.

Southern clinches
share ofTVC title
Correspondent report
RACINE - Behind a great team effort, the Southern
Lady Tornadoes broke a two-game losing streak and powered by the Federal Hocking Lancers, 59·40, Thursday
night to .clinch a share of the Tri-Valley Conference
Hockin~ Division league title.
.
The IItle is the first such title for a Southern basketball
team since joining the league in 1994. Southern is now 135 overall and tied with Waterford at 8-2 for the league
crown.
''This is another great step for the Southern girls pro·
gram, and these girls have worked hard to get a share of this
championship," said Southern Coach Scott Wolfe. "This
was one of our goal s. Injuries have killed us the past cou·
pie weeks, but the girls toughed it out and kept working
hard.
"We hope we can have some success in the tournament
and bring home yet another crown, and we hope our sue-

Please see Southern, B:l

Southern won its fi rst-ever Tri·Valley Conference Hocking Divis ion championship by defeating
the Federal Hocking Lancers 59-40 Thursday night at Hayman Gymnasi um. Front row, from left,
Cheyene Dunn, manager, Deana Pu llins, Rachel Chapman. Brigette Barnes, Amy Lee, Tara
Pickens, Joanne Pickens and Je ri Hill . statistician. Back row. !rpm left, assistant coach Tammy
Chapman , Brooke Kiser. Susan Brauer. Ash ley Dunn, Kat1e Sayre, Jess1ca H1ll, Knst11na
Williams, Ashley Roush. Angela Hayman and head coach Scott Wolfe.

·- - -~---~

. - 1:

•

�Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 7, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, February 7, 2003

'

osu

from Page 81
ed a three-poi~t play,
Coleman made r'wo free
throws and a layup, Matter
hit a jumper and a 3-pointer
and Coleman made two more
free throws as the Buckeyes
used a 16-4 run to move
llhead 5S-43 and take control. The., Buckeyes held
Mmnesota scoreless from
6:27 to 3: II.
After a timeout, Shannon
Bolden scored to stop the
run, but Ohio State came
right back with a jumper by
D'Wan Shackleford and
back-to-back
fast-break
layups by Coleman and
Matter to make it 61-45 with
.l :58 to play.
The Gophers tried to

Eastern
from Page 81
stop Jennifer Grandy, they
just have to slow her down.
Eastern u.sed that strategy
with a series of double teams
and switches off the screen
defensively.
Meanwhile,
Weber, Holter, Robertson,
and Hayman shared scoring
duties as Eastern rolled to a
15- I 0 first period lead.
Both clubs played even
throughout the second period
at 12-12, but the Eagles led at
the half 27-22. Hupp, Holter,
White, and Armes did a great
job defensively around the
perimeter and Eastern also
was patient in its halfcourt
offense.
The Eagles scored quickly
when they had the chance,
especially in transition, then

Meigs
from Page 81
game in the second period by
notching six points. Meigs
kept the Rockets at bay with
jumpers for Jaynee Davis and
Kayte Davis. Massie cut the
lead to 19-14 before Shannon
Soulsby and Pierce each hit
two free throws to end the
half with Meigs holding a 9point advantage 23-14.
Meigs opened the second
half with a 7-1 run fueled by
three straight Pierce two
pointers as the Meigs lead
grew to 30-15.
Kimmy Cremeans drilled a
three point hoop to make it
32-20 but that basket was
negated by a Soulsby three
giving the maroon and gold a
15 point cushion. Massie and
Brandi Rader ·combined to
cut the gap to 38-28 with :26

mount a comeback, but
seemingly every time they
scored, an Ohio State player
would respond with an easy
la&gt;:up or free throws after
bemg. fouled on a breakaw~y.
Oh10 State coach J1m
Foster said the key to the
game was simple.
"We $01 out in transition
and Clllty started to make
some good reads on
screens," Foster said.
Foster said the Buckeyes
knew they couldn't bang
w\!h the hi~er Gophe~.
You c~n t let them d1c~te
pos111on,
Foster sa1d.
"You've got to mov~."
.
And move they d1d. Oh10
State scored IS points on fast
breaks and didn't allow the
Gophers a fast-break point.
"I could- just feel the
momentum of Ohio State
that last seven or eight minutes,'' Borton said. "They
pulled the basketball out into
an offense when they didn't.
The result was controlling
. the tempo of the game.
The Eagles continued the
same strategy in the third
round and led 43-35 after
three rounds, then sustained a
Trimble comeback that
included .a Grandy baseline
driver and Faires free throw
that cut the Eastern lead to
one late in the glllDe.
Eastern wavered ·but did
not break, maintaining composure and never allowing
Trimble to slip over the
hump.
Despite being
outscored 24-22 in the last
round, Eastern held on to win
65-.59.
Eastern free throw shooting, that had been somewhat
suspect throughout the season played a huge role in preservmg the win. Eastern hit
15-19 at the line for an outstanding 79 percent.
left in the period. Renee
Bailey canned two free
throws with just three seconds left on the third period
clock to stake the Marauders
to a 40-28Iead heading to the
final eight minutes.
The Marauders slowed the
pace on offense in the final
frame; Meigs went 2 of 4
from the field in the last quarter with Kayte Davis and
Soulsby getting the only
Marauder field goals. The
free throw line was kind to
the Marauders going 6 of 6 in
the fourth quarter as they
hekl off the Rockets for the
11 l,l&lt;&gt;int win.
P1erce led the Marauders
with 20 with Jaynee Davis
adding 12. Soulsby notched
eight, Kayte Davis chipped in
four, Renee Bailey three,
Jus tine Dowler two and
Maria Drenner one.
Defense was an important
part of the win according to
Meigs coach Paul Brannon.

•

College basketball

were a completely different
team."
Janel McCarville led .
Minnesota with 15 points
. and 12 rebounds, while
Corrin Von Wald added 12
.
pm.nts. Matter had 14 for
Oh1~ State.
Wtthout Whalen, who sat
out most of the first half with
two fouls, the Gophers struggled, repeatedly taking tough
MOUNT VERNON -The tossed in II points.
shots and turning the ball
The Cougars regained the
University
of Rio Grande
over. Whalen scored two
lead
at 52-46 in the second
Redmen
basketball
team
lost
points in the first half, maktheir
fourth
consecutive
road
to see the Redmen
half
only
. ing a pair of free throws in
game by suffering a 79-70 fight back again and take a
place of Corrin Von Wald
who was hurt on a fast break loss to Mount Vernon 55-54 lead with 13:35
Nazarene on
Thursday remaining. Rio Grande held a
·
when she was fouled hard by evenin~ at the Physical 60-57 edge \Yith II :06 on the
Education Center.
clock after a three-pointer by
Matter.
Mount Vernon Nazarene freshman Cedric Hornbuckle.
The Buckeyes weren't
MVNU pulled away late to
much better. Ohio State ( 16-9, 5-8 AMC) jumped out
to
an
11-0
lead
and
pushed
get
the nine-point win.
turned it over 12 times in the
The Cougars were led by
· first half and struggled for the advantage to 17-4 before
the
.
Red
men
got
busy.
Rio
Konrad
Morris, Phil Argento
consistency on offense.
Grande (16-10, 7-4 AMC) and Brad Moser. Morris had
battled back to grab a 43-42 a double-double with 18
lead
at halftime on a stick points and 10 rebounds,
Eastern hit 25-65 for 38.5
back
by senior Jerry Barlow Argento scored 18 points and
percent on two's, no three's,
(Otway,
OH).
Moser chipped in I0 points.
and grabbed 35 rebounds
battling an injury Andy Dunn also found dou(Robertson II, Holter 8). to Barlow,
his pelvis, managed to ble figures with 10 points off
Eastern had seven steals (Jen score 16 points and corral 13 the bench.
Hayman three); five assists rebounds in the losing effort
MVNU out-scored Rio
(Holter two); and 20 fouls.
for the Redmen. Nat Moles Grande 37-27 in the second
Trimble hit 16-49 on two's, added 13 points and six half as the Redmen slumped
hit 6-15 trey's, and 9- I 3 at rebounds, Matt Simpson from the field, connecting on
the line with 30 rebounds chipped in 12 points off the only 9-of-32 shots (28 per(Hooper 9). Trimble had 3 bench and Seth Deerfield cent).
steals, .5 assists, and ten fouls.
Eastern won the· reserve
game 41-37 as the young
Eagles marched to their second win in the last three
MOUNT VERNON - The rebounds and swil,led three
games to finish the season University
Rio Grande steals. Senior po111t guard
strong. Eastern was led by Redwomen of
basketball team Emily Cooper netted seven
Krista White with 13 and snapped a three-glllDe losing points, six rebounds and four
Casey Smith with 10. streak with a 70..65 triumph assists. Cooper hit key free
Trimble was led by Alicia over Mount Vernon Nazarene throws down the stretch 10 seal
Andrews with 17 and Krystal on Thursday evening.
the victory.
Coe with nine.
The game was hotly contest- ·Mount Vernon Nazarene (9Eastern plays Beaver- ed throughout the first half with 17, 2-13 AMC) was led by the
Eastern next Thursday in the the Redwomen taking a 33-31 hot shooting of lenni Davis.
sectional tournament at lead at halftime.
Davis tossed in 28 points,
Vinton County at 8 p.m.
Rio Grande (13-13, · 3-10 including seven three-pointers.
AMC) was led by sophomore· She also coUected six rebOunds
forward Alkia Fountain. She and handed out six assists.
"We were able to shut produced a double-double with Melanie Gosnell added 16
Kirnmy Cremeans down; she ~3 points (17 in the second halt) points and six boards with three
scored 22 aganist us in the and 10 rebounds. Fellow blocked shots and Susan
fll'St gamei." Cremeans had sophomore Tiffany Johnson Adams chipped in 14 points
only six points for the added 20 points (11 in the sec- .and hauled m 12 caroms. ·
ond half), pulled down six
Rio Grande shot 42 percent
Rockets on the night.
Massie led the Rockets
with 20 points. Meigs shot IS
of 35 from the field and an
impressive 17 of 20 from the
foul line.
Wellsion hit 16 of 41 from
the field and 4 of 7 at the foul
line.
Jaynee Da~is led the
Marauder in rebounding by
hauling in six. Pierce and
Drenner each added four.
Massie grabbed six of the 17
Rocket rebounds.
Meigs will host Warren
Saturday at I p.m. Seniors
Maria Drenner, Michelle
Drenner, Kayte Davis and
Shannon Soulsby will be
playing their last home game
for Meigs High and will be
'~' compassionate tare
honored prior to the game.
Is f!lven lo thooe whu

Redmen lose fourth
straight road game
The Cougars took the
rebound battle as well, 40-37,
and committed one more miscue than Rio Grande 12-11.
For the game, Rio Grande
shot 39 percent (26-of-66)
from the floor, 22 percent (6of-27) from three-point land
and 92 percent (12-of-13)
from the foul line. Mount
Vernon Nazarene shot 46 percent (28-of-61) from th~
floor, 35 percent (8 -of-23)
from the beyond the threepoint arc and 71 percent (I 5of-21) from the free throw
line.
.
The Cougars avenged an
89-81 loss to the Redmen,
December 14 at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande will · face
Malone in Canton · on
Saturday. Game time is set for
7:30 p.m. Rio Grande defeated Malone 69-68 on a lastsecond tip-in by Chris
Ballenger Jan. 11 at the Newt.

Redwomen win at Mount Vernon
(24-of-57) from the field, 15
percent (2-of-13) frOm threepoint land and 69 percent (20..
of-29) from the free throw line.
MVNU countered with 39.6
percent shooting (21-of-53)
from the field, 40 percent (I()..
of-25) from long range and 62
percent (13,of-21) from the
charity stripe.
Mount Vernon won the
rebounding battle, 43-32 but
committed nine more turnovers
(22-13)
than
did the
Redwomen.
Rio Grande will face Malone
on Saturday in Canton. Game
time is set for 5:30p.m. Malone
defeated Rio Grande 69-58 at
the Newt Oliver Arena Jan. II.

Southern
from Page B1
cess also opens the doors for
the boys to do the same."
"Once again, this was a
total, unselfish team effort.
Every girl played their role
very well. We have no indiviqual stars, but we have a
team full of stars. It was
ironic we were able to clinch
a tie •for the league against
Federal Hocking. Federal
knocked us out of the league
last year with a one-point
overtime win, so this victory
was very fitting. "
Junior swing guard Katie
Sayre clUDe straight from the
doctor's office to the court
and turned in one of the best
games of her career. Sayre
manhandled several crucial
rebounds with ten in all and
led the team _with 15 points
for a double-double.
. Seni.or
post
Rachel
Qhapman also had a great
gome with 12 points and several key rebounds, while
Brigette Barnes, still nursing
a tender ankle, added eight
points and a solid floor game.
· Ashley Dunn added seven
points in helping Southern
get off to a good start, Deana
Pullins added six, Tara
Pickens six. Amy Lee three,
and Ashley Roush two. Lee,
despite just putting three
points on the board, had an
excellent floor game with silt
assists and three steals.
Additionally, she had just
two turnovers.
Federal Hocking was led
by Amanda Stover with 13

•

into the half with SHS leading 35-21.
.
Southern delivered the
knock-out blow in the third
quarter with one of its best
defensive stands of the year.
The SHS defense held
Federal to just four points.
Meanwhile, SHS put 15
markers on the board compliments of a Sayre resurrection. Sayre came to life with
two steals and Jay-ins and
drilled a three pointer from
the· corner.
Lee and Chapman each hit
baseline stop and pops, then
Tara Pickens grabbed a coupie Barnes feeds for two
mside scores the score 50-35
SHS.
'
Southern went up by 30 at
on~ poi~t before Federal .
w~lttled 11. back to the 20
pomt deficit at ~e end. The
SHS reserv.es fimshed out the
last four mmutes of the game
for the Tornadoes, the final
59-29
F d. al
_
_
e er was 17 54 , 16 50
two's, 1-4 three's, 5-13 free
throws, and 33 rebounds
(Hart 7). Federal ~ad four
blocks, 12 steals (Gtlders 4),
28 turnovers .. and 20 fouls.
Southern hit 22-.57 overall,
20-49 on two's, 2-7 three's,
and 13-22 at the line.
Southern had 37 rebounds
(Sayre 10, Chapman 7); 18
steals (Lee four), 13 assists
(Lee 6); 21 turnovers, and 16
fouls.
Southern won the reserve
glllDe 36-20 led by Joanne
Pickens with a game-higli 18
points, Susan Brauer added
seven, and Jessica Hill five .
Lindsay Garrett had six for
Federal.

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Boys
Thursd1y
Cols. Marion-Franklin 73, Cols. Eastmoor
68
Cots. Wellington 73, Maranatha 51
Fairfield Chr. 54, .Muskingum Chr. 46
North~ide Christian 55, Grove City
Chrlst•an 28
Powell VIllage Acad. 54, Torah Academy 50
Sugarcreek Garaway 78, New Philadelphia
Tuscarawas Cath. 26
Xenia Nazarene eo, Central Baptist 47

Girls
~uthem 59, Fed. Hocking 40
Fed. Hocking .. . a 13 4 15· - 40
Southem .. ... 16 19 15 9 - 59
SOUTHERN - Kolle Sayre 6 2·2 15,
Rachel Chapm.an 5 1·2 12, Brigette
Barnes 2 4·5 8, Deana PullinS 3 0-o 6,
Amy Lee 1 1·4 3, Ashley Dunn 2 3·4 7,
Joarme Pickens 0 0-0 0, Ashley Raueh a 22 2, BrOOke Kiser 0 0·1 O, Jessica Hill 0 Q0 0, Susan Brauer 0 0-0 0, Kristllna
Williams 0 o-o 0. TOTALS 22 13-22 59.
·FEDERAL HOCKING Natalie
Williams 1 o-o 2, Terri Wolle 1 1·1 3,
Brandee Hart 3 1-4 7, Amanda Stover 6 00 13, Kelsey Lackey 5 0·3 10. Faith Gilders
0 3-4 3, Sarah Springer 1 0·1 2. TOTALS
17 5·14 40.
3-point goals - Southern 2 (Sayre,
Chapman). Federal Hocl&lt;lng 1 (Stover).

Molgo 50, W.lloton 31
Wellaton .. ... . 4 10 14 11 -39
Meigs ........ 12 11 17 10-50
WELLSTON - Rader 1 1 4, MaBOie 9 2
20, Patrick 1 0 2, Cremeans 2 0 6, L.
Bunnell 2 1 5, C. Bunnoll1 0 2. TOTALS 16
4·7 39.
.
MEIGS - Renee Bailey 0 3 3, Mana
Orenner 0 1 1, .lustlne Dowler 1 0 2,
Samantha Pierce 6 6 20, Shannon Souloby
2 3 8, Michelle Drenner o o o, Jaynee
DavJs 4 4 12, Kayto Davis 2 0 4, Fallaho
Stumbo 0 0 0, Jill Jenklno 0 0 0. TOTALS
15 17·20 50.
3-polrit goals- Wellston 3 (Cremeans 2,
Roder), Meigs 3 (Pierce 2, Souleby).
, . Eutem 85, Trinibll59
Eastern .. . . . . 15 12 16 22 - 65
Trlmble. : . .. .. 10 12 13 24 -59
EASTERN - Alysao Holter 4 o-o B.
Krl~ Whl~e I 3·3 5, Jenny Armes 0 o-o 0,
Morgan Weber 11 2·2 24, Katla Robertson
4 3.-t 11, Jessie Hupp 1 4·6 t_, Jen
Haymon 4 3-411. TOTALS 25 15·19 65.
TRIMBLE- Jennifer Grandy 10 2-4 24,
Altory Hooper 2 2 4·6 14, Julie Trace 3 2 00 12, Hannah Faires 3 1-1 7,Penny
McClelland 2 0·2 2. TOTALS 22 9·13 59.
3-point goals - Eastern none, Trimble 6
(Grandy 2, Hooper 2, Trace 2).

Thurodoy
Akr. Firestone 49, Akr. Ellet 41
Akr. Manchester 69, Cuyahoga Valley
Chr. Acad. 49
Archbold 79, Napoleon 44
Athens 63, Point Pleasant. W.Va. 35
Barberton 50, Cuyahoga Falls 35
Bornes~lle 63, Woodsfield Monroe Cent.
39
Bay 46, Rocky River Magnificat 44
Beallavlllo 60, Beverly Ft. Frye 44
Beaver Local 44, Wintersville Indian
Creek 23
Bellaire 59, Rayland Buckeye Local 55
Batlali'e St. John 83, Donahue, W.Va. 36
Bellbrook 82, Eaton 33
Beimont Union Local 62, Martins Ferry
61
Berlin Hiland 59, Strasburg-Franklin 44
Bethel 43, Bradford 42
Bluffton 52, Convoy Crestview 50, 20T
~oweraton Conotton Valley 66, Cadiz
Harrison. Cant 56

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Brookflokj 72, Loavlt1sbury·L.aerao 21
Brut/'141. SolOn 34
~ryan 50, SWanton 47
Burton Berkshire 33, Middlefield Cerdinol
24 . :.
Ceroy.37,.Now Rlogol35
Casstown Miami E. 73, 8pfing. Greenon
72
Castalia Margaretta 79, Ctyde 66
Chillicothe Huntington 56, Bainbridge
Paint Valley 47 .
Chillicothe Unloto 65, Waverly 29
Cin. Anderaon 64, Amelia 31
Cln. Colerain 65, Milford 47
Cin. Harrison 51 , Cin. Northwest 43
Cin. Hughes 68, Cin. Taft 24
Cln. Indian HiH 70, Clh. Deer Park 24
Cln. Landmark 63, Cin. St. Barnard 52
Cin. Madeira 48, Cin. Taylor 40
Cin. Mariemont 45, Flnneytown 32
Cln. Mercy 47, Cln. Roger Bacon 33
Cin. Oak Hills 50, Cin. Lakola West 37
Cln. Sycamore 38, Cin. Princeton 37
Cin. Walnut HUla 72. Aiken 17
Cln. Western Hills 59, Cln. WOOdward 33
Cln. Winton WoodS 65, Cin. Glen Este 57
Cin. Withrow 52, Cin. Mt. Healthy 48
Cin. Wyoming 41 , Cln. Reading 27
Cle. VASJ 77 . Madison 46
Coldwater 57, Rockford Parkway 43
CQIIIns Western Reserve 44, Ashland
Moplo1oo 38
.
Cols. Beechcroft 80, Pataskala Watkins
Mamorlel49
Colo. Bexley 72, Whitehall 30
Cols. East 50, Cots. Walnut Ridge 49, OT
Cola. Whetstone 59, Cols. Briggs 32
Cotumblana.79, Salineville S. 14
COlumbiana Crest\liew 37, Lisbon 32
Cary-Rawson -45, Leipsic 24
Creston Norwayne 51 , Rittman 39
Daltori 56, JeromesvUie Hillsdale 51
Day. Col. White 52. Cln. Shrader 43
Dey. Jeffer&amp;on 52, Troy Chr. 50
Day. Oakwood 65, Camden Preble
Shawnee35
Oelphoa St. John's 40, New Knoxville 22
DoyfoB1own Chippewa 78, W. Salem NW
39.
Edgerton 51, Antwerp 36
Edon 55, W. Unity HIHiop 43
Fairfield 57, Gin. Lakota East 43
Falrtleld Chr. 59. Muaklngum Chr. 20
Fairview 50, Sl. Augustine 16
Findley Liberty Benton 63. Dola Hardin N.
35
•
Gallon Nonhmor 60, Mt Gilead 41
Gallipolis Gallo Acad. 52. Jackson 51
Georgetown 72, Batavia 35
Germantown Valley View 43, W. Milton
Milton-Union 26
Gibsonburg 53, Kansas LakOta 49
Girard 70,.Younga. Liberty 36
Goshen 59,.Cin. Ro81 23
Graanfleld McClain 57, Chllllcolho Zane
Trace 45
Hamler Patrick Henry 62, Liberty Canter
48
Hanovorton:UnKed 56, E. Peleotlna 52
Hllloboro 52,.1!. Ctlmon 51
Holgate 65, Dtllanoe Ayoravllle 34
Hubbord 74, Cortland Laktvlow 39
Hudoon 37, Stow 27
Hudlon WRA 48, Lakt Ridge 19
Huron 58, Sandutky St Mary 21
Ironton Rock Hill 52. Proctorville Fairland
50
Jacklon Ctnter -'8, Housion 39
Jamestown GrHnovlaw 5g, N. Lowlobury
li'lad 153
John11own 55, Frodorloktown 53
Kalida 50, Pandora .GIIbot 40
Kinamon Badgor 46, Southington
Chillktr 39
~fayotte Alan E. 1!3, Spencervllla 47
Lebanon 77, W. Carrollton 36
L.aotonla 56, Sebring McKinley 22
Lemon-Monroe 62, Franklin 33
Liberty Chr. 32. Moranalha Chr. 27
Lima Shawnee 61 , Elida 54
Lima Sr. 50, Perry 46
Little Miami 50, Klngo Mills 45
Logan 61 , Vincent Warren 59
London Madison Plains 41, Cola.
Grandview ~ 9
Loveland 47, Wilmington 35
Lowellville 63, Berlin Center Western
Reserve 53
Mansfield. •St. Peter's 45, Mansfield
Madison 41

.

•

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

Baseball

Marion Pleasant49, Morral Ridgedale 46
Marion River Valley 43, Spana Highland
42
Mason 61 , Cin. Turpin 17
Maumee 44, Holland Spring. 34
McArthur Vinton County 64, Albany
Alexander 44
McDermott NW 46, Wheelersburg 41
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 45 ,
Delphoa Jefferson 44
Mechanicsburg 53, Spring. Cattl. Cent.
51
Metamora Evergreen 73, MontpeNer 40
Middletown 57. Hamlltqn 45
Middletown Chr. 55, Miami Valley 53
Middletown Madison 72 , Day. Northridge
32
Miilel"sburg W. Holmes 66, Bellville Clear
Fork 35
Mineral Ridge 50, Vienna Mathews 39
Minster 52, New Bremen 30
Mogadore Field 61 , Streetsboro 41
Monroe 62, Franklin 33
N. LimB S. Range 62 , N. Jackson
Jackson-Milton 30
Navarre Fairless 58, Mas.$11on Tuslaw 31
Nelsonville York 47, Belpre 45
New London 76, Plymouth 73
New Madison Tri-VIIIage 47, Covington
40
New Middletown Spring. 68, McDonald
31
New Richmond 65, Blanchester 47
Newark Licking Volley 60, Hebron
Lakewood 40
Newtown Falls 43, Warren Champion 31
Niles McKinley 44, Youngs. Austintown·
Fitch 39
Norwalk St Paul 69, Ashland Crestview
36
Old Fort 50, Bettavllle 18
Open Door 45, Fremont Temple 26
Orange 76, Laurel 15
Oregon Cloy B1, Sandusky 41
Oregon Strltch 68, Northwood 45
Ottawa Glandor168, Kenton 35
Ottowa Hills 56. Tal. Chr. 52
Painesville Riverside 61 , Temple Chr. 33
Parma Normandy 46, Maple Hts. 43
Parkerabury S.. W.Va. 62, MsrloHo 48
Paulding 44, Columbus Grove 41
Perry 59, Lakeside 53
Perrysburg 54, Sylvania South11lew 30
Pentsvllte 53, Pioneer N. Cent. 31
Piketon 50, Lucaavlllo Valley 35
Pi1sburg Franklln·Monroe 58, Arcanum
36
Pomeroy Meigs 50, Wellston 39
Portsmouth 45, Minford 31
Powell VIllage Acod. 35. Torah Academy
24
Racine S. 59, Stewart Federal Hocking
40
Ravenna 60, Kent Roosevelt 49
Reedsville E. 65. Glouster Trimble 59
Richmond Dale SE 72, Beaver E. 36
Russia 46, Sidney Lehman Cath. 44
S. Charleston SE 52, W. Uberty Salem 44
S. Point 57, Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant
22
S. Webster 73, Portomou1h W. 34
Salem 64, E. Uverpool41
Sandusky Perkins 75, Milan Edison 49
Sarahs\1111&amp; Shenandoah 55, New
Matamoras Frontier 39
Shaker His. Hathaway Brown 6i, Gates
Mills Hawken 50
Smithville 67, Applecreek Waynedale 43
Spring. Kenton Ridge 136, Spring. NW 55
Spring. NE 61, COdervtlle 58, OT
.
Spring. Shawnee 62, lewistowp Indian
Lake 54
Springboro 56, S1ebblns 24
St. Marys 47, Celina 35
Steubenville Cath. Cent. 70, Wellsville 49
Stryker 40, Gorham Fayette 29
Sycamore Mohawk 59, Fostoria St.
Wendelln35

Sylvania Northvlaw 61, Whitehouse
Anthony Wayne 54
Tiffin Colvert 61, Fremont St. Joseph 56
Tlpp City Tippecanoe 46, New Carlisle

=~r. ,?,;,~~:rd.~ •. ' ···~'fa:~~ VAlley 5~. Oorilitiy 4!

face Alzheimer•s
Dt....,. and related

points, Kelsey Lackey with
te~, Brandee Hart seven~ •
Fatth Gilders three, Tem
Wolfe
three,
Natalie
Wil.liams two, and Sarah
Spnnger one.
Southern jumped out to a
16-8 first period .lead behind
balanced scormg from
Chapman, Sayre, Barnes,
Dunn and Pul~ms, From ~e
get-$o, Lee d1d a good JO~
findmg the open man and hll
Chapman and Sayre for easy
ms1de scor~s.
. .
Barnes h1t Dunn ms1de for
an early score and. Southern
l~d 8-4 after brea!dng a 4-4
lle. Chapman ~~~ a _long
JUmper, Sayre h1t a pa1r of
free .throws, and Dunn hit a
chanty toss for a 13-8 advan18
\~uthem then ,PUlled away
on a big Pullins JUmper from
the wing and a pair of Barnes
free throws tO lead 16-8 after
one round.·
Southern began to establish
.lise If by sw1tc
. h'mg de.enses
~
throughout the second frame
but also played well offen~
sively. Chapman, Barnes, and
Dunn were the main co,_s in
the drive. Barnes d1d a
praiseworthy job in guarding
Federal's Terri Wolfe who
had beCn averaging 13 'points
a game. Barnes held her to
just three points on the night.
A Chapman three pointer
from the corner seemed 10
give the Tornadoes the
momentum they needed
going into the half, although
Amy Lee hit a free throw,
and Sayre and Pullins each
had two points. Brandee Hart
and Amanda Stove each had
four apiece to keep Federal in
the glllDe as both clubs went

. www.mydallysentlnel.com

Scoreboard·
Prep Basketball

'

Tot . Whitmer 62, Fremont Ross 42
Tontogany Otsego 49. Genoa 37
Twtnsbury 52, Mloyfield 40
Union City Mlsalsslnawa Valley 48,
Ansonia 31
Urbana 54, Bellefontaine 43
Utica 56, Centerburg 53
Van Buren 40, Arcadia 36
Van Wert 51 , Lima Bath 39
Van Wert Ltncolnview 48, Ada 41 , OT
Vanlue 37, Arlington 24
Versailles 51, Ft. Rec:x:wery 45 ··:.
W. Alexandria Twin Valley S. 69, New
Paris National Trail 55
W. Jefferson 49. Cola. Acad. 26
W. Lafayette RidgewoOd 56, Malvern 32
·Wapakoneta 44, Defiance 32
Waler!ord 54, Hemlock Miller 21
Wauseon 74, Delta 21
Waynesfield-Goshen 45, Marion Cath. 34
Waynesville 60, Brookville 23
Western Brown 67, Clermont NE 55
Williamsburg 53, Felicity 51, OT
Woodmore 66, Millbury lake 33
WoosterTrlway 61, Loudonville 37
Worthington Chr. 80, Howard E. Knqx 46
Youngs. Boardman 79, Warren ~lng
49
Youngs. Rayen 46, Warren JFK 37
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 45, Akr.
Coventry 39

College Basketball
Man

'EI Titan' arrives at
Yankee Stadium

Duquesne 69. Rhode Island 62
La Salle 62, Fordham 54
Manhattan 66. Niagara 54
Saint Jos8ph's 74, St. Bonaventure 68
Siena n , lona 42
William &amp; Mary 62, Towson 35
SOUTH
, Auburn 63, Kentucky 56, OT
Belmont 58, Jacksonville 37
Delaware 56, N.C.-Wilmington 55
Duke 61, Clemson 49
Florida AUantlc 96, Jacksonville St. 83
Georylo 76, Mlssls~ppl St. 71
Georgia St. 52, UCF 50
James Madison 68, George Mason ~
LSU 69, South Carolina 66
Uberty 86, Hampton 66
Mercer 60, Gardner-Webb 59 .
New Orleans 60, New Mexico St. 46
Nicholls St. 54, Lamar 49
SE Louisiana 70, Sam Houston St. 64
Samford 52, Stetson 48
Soulh Alabama 55, loulslana-Lalayette
51
Tennessee 86, Mississippi 43
Tennassee Sl. 78, Murray St. 70
Troy St. 80, Campbell 71
Va. Commonwealth 67, Old Dominion 56
Vanderbilt eo, Alabama 69
VIrginia 64, Wake Forest 44
W. Carolina 73, Chattanooga 69
MIDWEST
Iowa 65. Michigan 57
Loyola ol Chicago 73, Youngstown St. 62
Michigan St. 58, Wisconsin 43
Ohio St. 66, Minnesota 58
Penn St. 82, Illinois 69
Purdue 74, Northwestet"n 5B
Wla.-&lt;lroen Bay 79, Cleveland St. 59
Wla.·MIIwaukeo 76, Detroit 61
SOUTHWEST
Mkidle Tennessee 70, Nonh Texas 58
SW TaMas 84, Louisiana-Monroe 50
T8Mas-Arllngton 69, Stephen F.Austln 61
T8Mas·San Antonio 68, Nonhweatern St.
54
FAR WEST
Arizona 79, Washington 66
Arizona St. 70. Washington St. 52
BYU 57, Now Mexico 48
Boise St. 68, Nevada 63
CelltJrnla 70, Oregon St. 55
Fresno St. 64, UTEP 39
Gonzaga 67, Loyola Marymount 64
Long Beach St. 76, Col St.·Fuller1on 63
. Louisiana Tech 67, Hawal144
Montana 63, Portland St. 44
Montana St. 78, E. Washington 71
Pepperdlne 77, Penland eo
SMU 61, San Jose St. 58
Sen Diego St. 60, Colorado St. 47
Stal'!ford 85, Oregon 54
UC Riverside 75, UC Irvine 59
UNLV 68, Wyoming 65
Utah 68. Air Force 39

NEW YORK (AP)- The
Sultan of Swat, the Iron
Horse, the Chairman of the
Board.
Big nicknlUDes on baseball's biggest team.
And now: "El Titan de
Bronze."
Jose Contreras finally
made it to Yankee Stadium
on Thursday to finalize his
$32 million, four-year contract.
At his introductory news
conference, Contreras said
Cuban president Fidel
Castro dubbed him "The
Titan of Bronze" because the
right-hander was the Cuban
ace. The nicknlllDe original! y belonged to Antonio
Maceo, the general who led
the Cuban liberation army
against Spain in the 19th
century.
Contreras,
however,
wouldn't say what he thinks
about Castro, whose communist regime has caused
many Cuban baseball stars
to defect, leaving their families behind.
"I can talk about Cuba. I
can talk about Cuban baseball," Contreras said through
a translator. "But I'm not
here as a politician to talk
about politics." .
Dressed in a doublebreasted blue-gray suit, with
a pin striped No. 52 jersey on
top, the 6-foot-4 right-hander spoke softly about his
departure from Cuba last fall
and his hopes to make his
mark in the major leagues.
His model is Roger
Clemens, one of his new
teammates in pinstripes.
Will the Titan pitch inside,
just like the Rocket?
..Si, si, si," Contreras said,

Pro Basketball
National Baeketball Auoclatlon
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AUon11c Dlvlolon
w
L Pot GB
New Jersey . .. 34
15 .694
Boston '.. .... 27
22 .551
7
Philadelphia . . 25
24 .510
9
Washington .. . 24
25 .490
10
Orlando . ... . 24
26 .480 10h
New York . . . .. 21
27 .438 12~
Miami . . . .. . . 17
32 .347
17
Central Dlvlalon
w
L Pet GB
·Indiana ::· .... •..• :34
15 .694
Detroit . .... .. 32
15 .681
1
Milwaukee . . . . 25
23 .521
a\
New Orleans. . 26
24 .520
Atlanta . ... . 19
15
30 .388
Chicago ... .. 17
17
32 .347
Toronto .. .... 14
34 .292 19~
Cleveland .. . . 10
40 .200 24'k
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldweot Dlvlalon
w
L
Pet
GB
Dallas . . . . ... 38
10 .792
5),
San Antonio .. 33
16 .673
Minnesota .... 29
20 .592
9\1
Utah ... .. ... 29
20 .592
9\1
Houston ..... 26
22 .542
12
Mei'J1)his . ... . 13
35 .271
25
Denver .. .. . . 12
37 .245 261
Pacific Division
W
LPctGB
Sacramento .. 34
17 .667
Portland .. .. . 32
16 .667
'!,
Phoeni)( . . .. . 29
21 .580
4~~
L.A. !.akers ... 24
23 .511
a
Golden State . 21
27 .435
11~
Seattle . . . ... 21
27 .438
11 7,
L.A. Clippers . . 17
32 .347
15
Wednelday'a GamH
Boston t 14, Sean!e 74
Cleveland 105, Houston t02
Portland 101, Miami 87
New Jersey 111, Philadelphia .85
beiroK 69, LA. Clippers 60
New Orleans 108, Sacramento 84
Utah 105, Memphis 84
San Antonio 103, Golden State 99
Thuf'lday's Gamet
L.A. Lokera 114, NewYO&lt;k 109
Milwaukee 97, Seattle 91
San Antonio 83, Denver 74
F~dlly'o Gamoo
No games scheduled
Saturday'&amp; Garnea
No games schaduled
Sundl'f'l Game
AII·Star Game at Atlanta

words agent Jaime Torres
didn't need to translate.
"That's the difference for a
pitcher," Contreras said.
"That's how a pitcher I ives,
pitching inside."
Asked what he admired in
Clemens, Contreras cited
"great, incredible physical
condition and abilities,"
"pitching strategy" and
"guts and bravado."
Contreras, who has a burly
chest and tree-trunk legs,
will get to start showing his
stuff next week, when the
Yankees open spring training in TIUDpa, Fla. He' II be
scrutinized along With the
team's other new foreign
acquisition,
outfielder
Hideki "Godzilla" Matsui.
"These people have been
superstars in their respective
leagues," said Yankees manager Joe Torre, looking tan
following a six-week vacation in Maui. ''I'm curious. I
really am. They're both
going to need interpreters.
But I bet they understand
each other."
Contreras did not get quite
the welcome given Matsui, a
three-time MVP in Japan.
When Matsui was introduced Jan. 14, the Yankees
held a news conference at a
Times Square hotel, and
New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg was the official
greeter.
Thursday's fiesta was held
in the Stadium Club of
Yankee Stadium, and Bronx
Borough President Adolfo
Carrion Jr. welcomed him
"on behalf of all New
Yorkers and 1.4 million residents· of the Bronx, many of
Latino descent."
Yankees owner George

Steinbrenner
allowed
Contretas to use a private
plane to travel to New York ·
from Florida on Wednesday,
and briefly came aboard to
meet his latest acquisition ·
for the first time.
Contreras left the Cuban .
team in October when it was :
playing in Mexico. He didn't ·
tell his teammates his plans. ·
didn't tell his wife, didn't
tell his two daughters, aged .
2 and I 0, according to the
Yankees.
Once he established resi:
dency in Nicaragua and
became a free agent, the
Yankees won quickly in bidding that also included
Boston and Seattle.
"Since I left Cuba, my
dream was to be a Yankee,"
Contreras said.
New York general manag: ,
er Brian Cashman likes
Contreras for his 95 mp~ :
fastball, tough split-finger
pitch and slider. The ,
Yankees had been tracking c
Contreras at tournaments •
since 1996 and decided after '
his standout performance in ·
the 2000 Sydney Olympics ,
that they would try to sign
him if he ever became available.
.
Contreras knows he mighi "
not even start because the .
Yankees have seven candi.
dates for their rotation heading to spring training.
"I've always been 'I ·
starter, and I would prefer to
remain a starter," he said.
"But I'm willing and ready
to do anything the Yankees
ask me to do. I'm the last
one to arrive. I understand
that."

College.b(lsketball

-

,,·.

j ,

d•f

........ &gt;· · - ·

·~

..... . , . , ..

•

Virginia beats No. 8 Maryland:

a:.

EAST
Cent. Connecticut St. 63, UMBC 49
Fairfield 72, Canislus 68
Fairleigh Dickinson 68, Wa~;~ner 62
Hartford 65, Binghamton 51
Long Island U. 98, St. Francis, Pa. 94
Manhattan 74, Maris1 53
Monmouth, N.J. 73, Sacred Heart 53
N. Illinois 70. Buffalo 61
Oulnnlplac at, Mount St. Mary's, Md. e2
St. Francis, NY n , Robert Morris 72
SOUTH
Arkansas St. 67. Fla. International 65
Belmont 84, Jacksonvute 52
Lamar 74, Nicholls St. 62
Louisiana Tech 66, Hawaii 65
Loulslana..U.fayette 67, South Alabama
60
Mercer 84, Jacksonville St. 78
Middle Tennessee 76, North Texas 55
Sam Houston St. 74, SE Louisiana 69
BASEBALL
Samford 79. Stetson 71
Major League BaHbllll
Tenn.-Marttn 95, Tennessee St. 75
Ame~can LHgua
TenneBBee Tech 91 , Murray St. 83
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Signed RHP
Troy St. 99, GOOfllla S1. 81
Virgk'lia 86, Maryland 78
Paul Rigdon, RHP Rafael Betancourt, INF
Wake Foroa1 73, N.C. State 58
Ron Wright and OF Brant Brown to minor
MIDWEST
league contracts.
Bell Si. 82. Ohio 56
, NEW YORK YANKEEs-Roleaoed L~P
E. llllnola 95, E. Kan1uct&lt;y 76
Randy Kiesler.
Kent St. 73, Bowling Green 67
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAY8-Agreed to
Morehead St. 79. SE Mleaourl89
terms with 1B Travis Lea, RHP Gerardo
S. IRini&gt;ls 85, Droke 64
UMKC 91 , S. Utah 69
Garcia, RHP Sath McClung, RHP Matt .
Wla..ClrHn Bay 89, Cleveland St. 56
White, and SS Hector Luna on one-year
Wls.-MIIwaul&lt;ae 61, Detro~ 50
contracts.
Youngstown St 65, Loyola of Chago 83
Notional LHgua
SOUTHWEST
NEW
YORK
METs-Agreo&lt;l 1o tarmo
Fraano St. 76, UTEP 63
Northweatern St. 73, Texas-San Antonio with RHP Bobby Munoz on a minor league .
contract.
63
Oral Roborts ·78, Chlcego St. 48
ST. LOUIS CARDINAL8-Signod LHP
SMU 82, San Jose St. 69
Rk:lc Ank le!, INF Wilson Delgado, RHP\
SW TeMu 102, Louisiana-Monroe 87
Chance Ctptl, RHP Jimmy Journell, RHP
To&gt;&lt;ae A&amp;M.COrpue ChrleU 95, Cenlral
Joromy Lambert, RHP Scolty Layfield ,
'Baptist 56
'
RHP Josh Pearce and LHP Leo Walrond to
FAR WElT
one·year contracts.
Arizona 88 , Wuhlngton 85, OT
FOOTBALL.
Arizona St. 67, Washington 81. 54
California 84, Oregon St. 71
Natlo""l F001boll Lloguo
E. Washington 78, Montana St. 74
ARIZONA CAROINAL8-Named '!'ike
Idaho 68, Col Poly·SLO 65
Tolbert wide receivers coach and Marty
Long Beach St. 79, Cal S1.·Fullorton 73
Galbraith Ught endt coach.
Loyola Marymount 58, Ponland 71
.NEW ORLEANS SAINT8-AIIocated 01.
Montana 67, Portland St. 49
Jcwoo Bush, 08 Shown Byrdsong, WR
N011ada 67, BoiBB St. 64
Kerwin Cook, QB Chris Flnlon. G Melvin
. New MexicO St. 78, New Orleans 60
Oregon 79. Stanfo~ 64
Paige and WR Nate Turner to NFL Europe.
uc Santa Barbara 63, Utah St. 50
NEW YORK JETS- Promoled Jimmy
Raye to assistant head coach'senlor offenWoman
sive asa:lstant. Named T)m Berbenlch offenEAST
sive assistant, Jim Space director o1 videO
Boolon U. 60, Albarr;, N.Y. 55
and John Sel1er director ol multimedia proCanlslus 63, Sl. Peter's 59
ductlon.
Drexel 69, Hofstra 65

Transactions

"'

COLLEGE PARK, Md.
(AP) - No longer forced to
play in their personal House of
Horrors, the VIrginia Cavaliers
made themselves right at
home in Maryland's new
arena.
Reserve Devin Smith scored
17 points and keyed a 16-0
second-half run as Virginia
erased a 12-point deficit and
stunned the eighth-ranked
Terrapins 86-78 Thursday
night.
It was the first Atlantic
Coast Conference road win for
the Cavaliers. Vrrginia had lost
nine straight and was 13-34 at
Cole Field House, where
Maryland played from 1955
through last season.
"We beat a terrific team in a
very tough place to play,"
Virginia coach Pete Gillen
said.
Down 65-53 with 12:50
remaining, Vrrginia (13-7, 4-4)
appeared headed to yet another loss at Maryland. But Smith
sparked the shocking comeback, twice hitting successive
3-pointers to spark the
Cavaliers to only their second
road win of the year.
''This is a tough venue,"
Gillen said. "As they get the
lead, the crowd gets Iou&lt;\er
and you get a little out of
sync. But we just kept throwing guys in there, and fortunately they did a good job."
Travis Watson had 15
, points and I0 rebounds for
the Cavaliers, who lost their
last five games at Cole· by an
average of 18 points.
Ryan Randle scored 17 for
the Terrapins (14-5, 6-2),
whose five-~ame winning
streak ended 111 surprise fashion. The defending NCAA
chlllDpions had won 14
straight ACC home games
and were Il-l l\I home.
"It looked like tonight we
thought we could win without our A-glllDe," Maryland
coach Gary WillilUDs said. "I
thought Virginia worked
harder than we did. We let
them come back because we
didn't cover anyone."
In the other glllDes involving ranked telllDS Thursday
night; No. 2 Arizona edged
Washington 88.-85 in overtime, No. 14 Wake Forest
topped .Noith Carolina State

73-58, and Oregon beat No. 25
Stanford 79-64.
Drew Nicholas and Steve
Blake became the 38th and
39th players in Maryland history to surpass 1,000 career
points. Nicholas scored 20 for
a 1,007 total and Blake had 12
for 1,00 I points.
The Cavaliers trailed by 12
before Smith hit two straight
from beyond the arc.
Maryland then went up by 10
before Vrrginia began it~ decistve run.
'They had us down and we
knew we had to respond to
that run with a run of our
own," Smith said. "We started
defending them and we started
hitting some shots and getting
confidence."
Watson scored inside and
Smith hit two straight 3-pointers before Jermaine Harper put
the Cavaliers up for good with
a 3. Elton Brown then made a
layup, and Harper capped the
burst with a 3-pointer to make
it 75-69 with 3:56 to go.
"We've been playing good
defense all year, but not

tonight," WillilUDs said.
The Cavaliers shot 49 per~
cent, including 12-for-22 from .
3-point range.
·
"It was just our night, hitting .
3s like that," Gillen said. "I"
think poise is a good word. We .
played with courage and we
played to win."
Down 49-47 at halftime, th~ ·
Ten-&lt;1pins used the inside play:
of Randle to regain the lead.
The senior center scored on a
follow, then made a layup
before Tahj Holden scored on·
a tip-in. Randle capped the 8-0
spurt with a jumper in the Jan~
to put Maryland up by six.
After going 16-for-29 from
the field before halftime,
Vrrginia missed its first five
shots of the second half. Smith
ended the drought, but Randle
answered with a layup and
Nicholas made a three-point.
play to make it 58-49.
.
Minutes later, Blake reach~d .
the 1,000-point plateau with a
3-pointer and Holden followed
with· a driving layup for a 65-·
53 lead.

OTICE

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CLASSIFIED

,.

&gt;,

.

'

Pf'KlM _ . - n dreN- 1998 Dodge Neon 4d•. auto, 88 ChiVy 1500 •••• 340, 5 C&amp;C Gene ral Home
01: 2 ~. MQUin, bouffant ole, 74,000 mllee. Red. sp, high mllea. $2500 OBO, Malntenenca- Painting, vinyl

.

etylta,- Jr. 7•9, mod/tall. EkCOIIont Con&lt;IHion. $3,800.
Roaoonably
Priced. eam.apm. {304)675-6325
(7401-3620
87 Corvette. 28,850 mttes,
Wate~lne Spoctal: 3/4 200 white with r&amp;d lntorto•.
PSI $21 .00 " - 100; 1' 200 Alwayo garaged, loaded.
PSI $35.00 Per tOO; All (740)379-2218
8&lt;111 Com))NIIIon Fttttngo ::-:-:--:--:-" -- In Stool&lt;.
96 Hyundal Accont GT, 4cty,
EVANS INT!APRIS- auto, atr, sunroof, 73.000
ES Jaclclon, Ohio, 1.801). mlloa,
aoklng
$2450,
537-9528
.{740)992·2952

.

'

.J '

TO
Place
Your
Ad ••• ·

m:rtbune
Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446"2342
Fax us at: (740) 446·3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallytribune.com

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Succ~ssful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

fto

L.-------

. 1
•

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
ot interest to: The Daily
Sentinel , PO BolC 729·20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

IIELPWANIFD

AnN: Point Pleasant.
Postal positions. Clerks/carriers/sorters.
No
eKp.
required. Benefits. For exam,
salary, and testing information call (630)393-3032 Ext.
782. Sam-Bpm. 7 days.

FARRAGO
Now accepting your
Spring/Summer cloth ing for
Attn; We need help, $12()0consignment
$5000/mo. 1·666·736· 7794
Call(304)675· 1059
www.heartoflhegarden .com
Farrago "Sale"
Prices reduced on all winter Avon Representatives want·
cloth ing as low as .50¢ per ed. (740)446·3356
item. 304-67 5· 1059
TUPPERWARE
Now booking parties &amp; taKing orders from our NEW
Spring catalog. Call to find
out about our monthly specials.
Interested in becoming a
co nsultant? Call for more
information.
Becky Meaige
(740)446·3l94

AVON! All Areasl To Buy or

Sell. Shirley Spears, 304675·1429.

Bartender Trainees needed, $250 a day poten·
tiat. Local positions 1-800293-3965 ext 4060.

Book:keeper/
Accounts
Payable position . Point
Pleasant area. Past eKperience with accounts pa~able
needed. FaK resumes to
, . . , , . . . . - - - - - . . , (304)523·0714 .

r

GIVEAWAY

Adorable Lab!. Collie MiK
puppies , born Christmas
Day. BlacK &amp; tan. (740)44111 38

To go homes only- 1 male
. Collie &amp; Lab dog. 1 female
Pit Bull &amp; Cockerspaniel
mix, 1 mate cat, call
(740)992- t 909

~r.;p;;,;;.;,;:,;;,;;.

____,

LOST AND
'

~

FOUND

FOUND- Female BlacK Lab,
near Spring Va lley. Call
(740)44 1_044 5
Lost American Bulldog. 4
mon. male, about 60 lbs
White wJ Black spots, last
seen on 1-26-03 Rt 62 area .
$250.00 reward fo r safe
return 304-675- 5653
Lost- BoKer. 6 mos ., male,
collar/tags. answers to
And rew. Reward! (740)9924405

r

roBuv

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Gold
Coins,
· Silver.
Proofsets. Diamonds. Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currency, M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151
Second Avenue. Gallipolis,
740·446-2842.

· to Recent
Growth

POSITIONS
AVAILABLE
• S;t,les Consultant
• Parts Department

Coun ter Sales
• Pans Depan ment
De livery
• Oil &amp; L ube

Technici&lt;m

Send Resume to

195 Uppe r Rt vcr

ipoli .'.. Ohm 4 563
T he Uesl Products.
rhe llesl llen elits.
The llesl W o r k

Enviro nment.

•

..
.

•'.

..,.

Surtday• P•p•r

Descrl~lon

• Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

• Include Phone Number And Addre11 When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 D•v•

HoMEli
FOR SALE
Profaeelonal

Poehlone

Gallipolis Developmental
Center, an ICFJMR, is
recruiting providers for pro-

LOOKING
FOR LPN
Monday- Friday, no weekends or Holidays. Apply In
person, 936 State Rout e
160, (740)446·9620
MRIDD Advocate
Protective serv1ces representative position, full-time,
in the Gallipolis office.
Bachelor's degree in human
services or related field and
experience in mental retardatiOn required. Send lax
resume to
Mary Helen Swan
Advocacy &amp; Protective
Services. Inc.
41 10 North High Street
1st floor
Columbus. OH 43214
Fax: (614)262·9752
EOE/AA
Truck Drivers, Immediate
h1re. class A COL requ ired,
excellent pay, expenence
required. Earn up to $1,000.
per wee k.Call 304·6754005

have high school diploma or
equlvol.nl
•ssoclate
..
"'
degree preferred.
Must
have excellent organization·
al and interpersonal rela·
tionshlp skills and be able to
work under pressure and
meet deadlinBS. Must have
the ability to prioritize work
and projacts and work lnde·
pendently. All applicants
must submit a letter ot lnterest and resume including
the names and addresses of
three references on or
before February 17, 2003 to
Ms. Phyllis Mason, SPHR ,
Director
of
Human
Resources, University of Rio
Grande, PO Box 500, Rio
Grande, OH 45674, email
pmasonO rio.edu Fax : 740245· 4909. EEOfAA employer.
Vinton Baptist Chwch Is currently seeking to employ a
General
Secretary!
Receptionist on a part·ti me
l,&gt;a sls. The minimum requirements will be that of a high
school diploma. EKperieoce
is a plus. Successful candi·
date will need to be pleas·
ant. polite, and able to work
well with others as a part of
a team. Please send resume
to: Vinton Baptist Church,
Attn: Board of Trustees, P.O.
Box 38, Vinton, OH 45686.
Must
be received by
February 5. 2003. ·

ANIIQUEs
___

~·

,'

''

..
r"~ r

·'

_.~
'

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1• r

Call Today! 740-446-4367,
1-800-214-0452,

--------~

Now TaKing Appl ication&amp;35
West
2 Bedroom
Townhouse
Apartments,
Includes Water Sewage,
T'"eh, $350/Mo., 740-446·
0008

on SA 124 E. F\lmeroy, 740992·2526. Russ Moore, :.\
owner.
,r 1.
.1 .

r~sl ~:
,,

I

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY-/SSt?
No Fee Unless we Winl
1-888-582·3345

5o-SOt Shoults, {740)949·
2908 or (740) 949-2017

~'rto

FORHOME'iSuv

~

Rental house for sale localed at 1410 Lewis St Pt.
Pleaaant Make offer , ca
· It
" 5p m. 304 -727-3316
aner

HI \ I \ I '

Jacqueline's "Ltvln' Dolle" ._.,
Presenting Apple Valley " ~
Dolls &amp; Kits. Custom made ·' ,.
babies &amp; toddlers for that • r
special someone, or make .,••.
your own, Your wayl Ma:ny ~ -~ ;
laces, eye ooloraf -h.air- ootor. " ' •
&amp; styles, skin tones, and · "".'l,
body styles to choose from . ;·
Qlothing also ·-' a\tlftabte . ._,•.
Compare to Middleton and ~· ~
My Twlnn Cuddly Babies •
Call tor more information . (,.&gt; ~·

Stick bui lt in 1998, 3 bed· c:==~===~
room. 3 bath fireplace, over

1(740)983-0730

acre, asking $104,900.

Ir

-;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

____

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
for immediate possession all
within 15 min. of downtown
G 1·
R
al1polis. ales as low as
6%. (740)446-3218.

M

H

~
. ILES~~

rlO
----.

HousEs
FOR JbNr

~·-------"'
, ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed

. Homes From $,99/Mo., 4%
Down , 30 Veers at B.S%
10 used homes under APR. For Ustlngs, eoo-3 19•
$2000, Call Karen&amp;, 740·
Ext.
_
3323
1709
385-9948
- - - -- -- - , BA House In Racine, with
1988 14x70 3 bedroom, on
water, sewer, trash $325.
rented Jot In Camp COOley,
WV, $7,500 Owner financing Month, No Pets {740)992·
5039
with $3,000 down. {740)245- - -- - - - - - _5_67_1_ _ _ _ _ __
3 br. house at 2105 North

1 acre, rlvelfront, brick ond
vinyl, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, 2
fireplaces, hardwood floors,
1988 Carrro/Uon 14x70 Moln St. no pets. $425.00 t
approximately 2000 sq.ft .
Mobife Home 2 bedrooms, 1 dep. 304-675·2749
Full basement, $160,000.
bath, (304)675-3615
(740)446-o538
3br. House located In
1989 Clayton Westwlnd, Mason, WrJ. $495. + Utilities.
3 Bedroom newly remOd- 2BA, WID hookup, range, No Pets. (304)773-5861
eled, In Middleport, call Tom refrigerator &amp; electric tur·
Clean warm 2 bedroom i
Anderson after 5 p.m.
naee. Located on a ranted
992·3346
lot a 64, Lake Dr., Rio home In Pomeroy, wfoptlon·
to buy, $400 a mo., good •ef·
- -' - - -- -Grande, 7 minutes wa!k to
3 bedroom, t bath, 2 story campus. $10,000 080. "'"noes 1740 1698•7244
'
home In Pomeroy, good co n- {614)214·51 51
dition, flreplace, (740)992One bedroom house In
9492
1996 Norris Mobil&amp; Home Bidwell with refrigerator &amp;
Like New. 16x76,
2br. siOV&amp;~ Gas heat with new
3 bedroom, single bath, Appliance s, 3 ton heat carpet. For more informs·
large family room, fireplace, pump, 8x10 wooden storage tlon, please call Sharon &amp;
large living room, complete bld. (304)675·5727
Scott Howell at (740)388·
new kitchen, utility room, 2
92_4_ ' - - - - - - ca r garage unattach'ed, 10 Trailer for sale with lot, 14x80,
very
good
ccnd.
heot
Small
1 bedroom home In
miles South Gallipolis, In
$300
plu s
EureKa, close to Locks &amp; pump, private lot, porches, Middleport.
&amp;
references
Dam. Phone (740)256-6949 ve ry reason'ably priced to deposit
(740) 256- 1243
Serious sell Hartford 3()4..882-2389 required, (7401992·6154
Inquires Only.
3 bedroom· 1· 112 bath,
wtnew
30x30
addition.
Located on 12 acres with
stocked pond. City Schools,
(740)446-8901
4
BEOFKXlM
HOME
Foreclosure, only $14,900,
Won't last. 1-800-7 19·3001
Ext. F144
4 bedroom Brick Home In
the country on 4-acre lot.
(740)379·2862

.'

IH584, Dleael, ROPS, With
canopy, 8F-4A tr&amp;l'\5.1 tklal
remotes, runs &amp; lOOks good.
$9,500. (740)379-2757

r ,[Jvmnxx

0064
cFi;iot~tow~th:::e:.~p;::r:;::om:lp;::ts::;·--.., - - - - - - - --

4 rooms and bath, stove/
refrige rator. Utilities paid,
$400 month. 46 Olive Street
(740)446-3945
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSO"
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $297 to $383.
WalK to shop &amp; movies. Call
740· 446·2588.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

(740~

Downtown Gallipolis, apart·
ment for rant , 1 or 2 bed· New eola &amp; Chair, $399.
rooln. {740)886·7174
9x12 carpet, room size $50.
Mollohan Carpet &amp; Furniture
~arage apartment for rent, 2 {740)446·7444.
Clork
bedroom , stove, ref rigerator Cltepel Rood, Porter, OH.
furn ished. Wotor paid, $275
month.
$150
deposit Paul Bunyan bedroom suite,
(740)446-9061.
dresser, night table, queen
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- size bed, mattress, Bo)C&amp;d
room apartments at Village springs. 5600. (7401446·
Manor
and
Riverside 0208
Apartments In Middleport
From 27a-$348. Call 740 _ Used fu rniture store, 130
992_5064 . Equal Housing Bulaville Pike. We sell mat_0"-ppo
" -rtu
_nit_ie_s_
. - -- tresses,
bunk
beds,
dressers, couches, appl i·
Hawthorne Apartments and ances, bedroom suites,
Storage now taking appllce.· recliners, Grave monu·
1/ons lor 2 bedroom apart· ments.
{740} 446-4782
ments. (740144t -151 9
Gallipolis, OH .·

s

,,~

8840

MollOhan Carpet, 202 Clark
JET
.1 ~
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
AERATION MDTORS
,.,.
{7401446·7444 ' 1·877·830·
9, 62. Free Estimates, Easy Repaired, New &amp; Rabuiit In ~ :.
financing, 90 days same as Stock. Call Ron , l;)l~na, 1. •:z!
.'
. ' ' ;T
cash . VIsa! Master Card. 801).537-9528.
Drive· a· little save alot.

a.

us~d

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar-"
fQr
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Qpen Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (7401446-7300

';
·" :
·1 ·,
&gt;1· ~

-.

"'

:,
....

.•.

I •·

Pioneer auto/truck CD player &amp; amp, 2 mpx speaker ,,
boxes &amp; monster cable .
1400. Complete. {3041675· ·•.,
648 5 al1er 6pm.

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2001
Jeep
Cherokea
BASIM!NT
Clohlc 4 wheel dr.,3,400
WATEf'IPROOf'INQ
mlteo Hke now $17,500.
Unconditional tllolmo guor304·882·3333
antH. Local raflrencea furExt n&lt;l d
C b nlollld. Eotabl~lted 197~.
2002
0
• e
Call 24 H... (740) 448·
Deramox Ouolly DieHI3500 0870, Rogora Basement
LT. Abaolutaly loaded. 8,800 WatorptDDflng.
mlteo. $38,000. (3041875·
3012 anytime.

IN MEMORY

IN MEMORY
In memory of
Sidney Roland Wise

Pleasant Valley Hospital

V

SUPERVISOR ORIPACU

Froni line management position with accountability 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:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive ·
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

lnga t·80CH19·300t ext.
3901

1984 ClliV)' 8·1 0 Extended
cab 4lC4, 2.6, 4 opeod, ole,
good condition. $1800. Bam6pm. (304)875-6325
1990 Oldl Clorra. 4 cylinder,
auto, run• good: 1989
Plymouth Van, 6 syllnder,
auto good condition, low
mlteo. Colt {304)875-5812 pr
{3041675-6869
1984 eutok L.ISobro, drlvoo
grut, ont owner, well cartd
for, t 50,000 mllll, $2500.
(740)44HI170
1994 BuiCk Rogal. all power.
air, tilt, crulte, amf'fm ca.t~
· 1411,000 mMII, In Qllll
condition, ook!ng $3,000,
(740)992-oo&amp;4

'

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
,

- -

We Maka HouH Cello

JONES'

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

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

(304) 675~5282

· 30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. OWner: Ronnie Jones

www.wvpcdr.com
doctarOwv dr.com

STORAGE

(304) 675-4340

NOTICE
.............

PC DOCTOR

MANUYS
HARTWELL
SELF STORAGE

(740) 992..3194

992-6635

Pomeroy

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New

D.eanHUl
New&amp;: Used
475 South t;hurch St.
Ripley, wv 25271

lOxlO
10x20
740·992-1717

(10'110' 6 10'x20')

Brian, Becky, Jessica
&amp; Brian Jr.

t. Rt. 1 CioesJein Rd •

1-800-822-0417
"W.Vs #I Chevy, Pontiac. Buick.

Best Service at
the Best Price

Olds

"lloatmyahlrt
In the stock
market!"

Garage

• Replacemenl
SAFELY HOME
I am home in Heaven, Dear ones,
Oh, so happy and so bright;
There is perfect joy and beauly,
In lhis everlasting light.

Window s • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

All the pain and grief Is over,
Every restless tossing passed;
I am now at.peace forever.
Safely home in Heaven at last

AVAILABLE
SATURDAY

Did you wonder I so calmly,
Tread the valley of-the shade?
Ohl But Jesus'. love illuminated
Every dark and fe~rlul glade.
And He came Himself to meet me,
In that way so hard to tread,
And with Jesus arm to lean on,
Could I have one doubl or dread?

Open 9wn-5pm
ft'ft U IIIIIIIU, fret In hl&gt;mt plctup
Call Ul rot Ill YDilr CO!llplllfr Medi

(740)

446-1812

A..d US aboUI 0 111
Setvice Plans!

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
4Snt
740-949-2217

8:00P.M.

T:~ke

the PAIN
out cf PAINTING
Let me }: 1: f,:.r y:u

MillS
FllllY
COISTIICTION

1

Building over 30 years
Footers, Foundation,

.Add·Ons, New Ho mes,
Pole Barns, Concrete,
Eleclric, Plumbing

Then you must not grieve so sorely,
For I love you dearly still,
Try to look beyond earths shadows,
Pray to trust our Father's will.

lruumna Work In cluded

The
Daily
Sentinel

Hours

(7 40) 992-3320

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

Email: blades , Laplink.com

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
*RIORII
*HOME

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

UJmiiiCE
*SEAllESS

amu

•FniEIIIIIMII•

848-1415

•New Homes
•Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare

•
•
•
•
•

New Garage•
Electrlcef Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding A PllnH11f1
Pltlo and Porch Decka

a

Free Estimates

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

Orchard graas hay for sale$2.50 square bate, $20 for PUBLIC NOriCE

Hondoa. Ch-. otcl Carol

Every Thursday &amp;:
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
or every month
All pack $5.00
Brtna this coupon
Buy $5.00 BoiWWI
GelS FREE

BISSEll
BUilDfRS me.

Hllyloge mun&lt;l bales 60-90
% Alfalfa obout 2000 tb«
$35-$40.00 per bate 394. 882-3251

'1lucks from $500. For llat·

740-992-5232

HELP WANTED

r

hOt1 POUCE IMPOUNDBt

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

24, 1959
Died February 8, 2002
loved and missed by Dad,
Mom, Sis, Heather, Jeff.

When that work is all completed,
He will genlly call you Home;
Oh, the rapture of thai meeting, ·
Oh, thE! joy to see you come.

lh \'\." 1'111: 1 \lit I'\.

High&amp; Dey
SeH·Storage

BING02171

bom December

Hog ready fo butcher. Call
anytime, leave meauge.
(740)256-1652

round be.,, (740)992·2623

~~~

Pomeroy Eagles

~

AAIEOE

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

(7 40) 992-2222 or
(740) 446-1018

Evlnrude
trolling
motor,
rebuHt tast yea•
from lack
of

HELP WANTED

Cellular

For more information,
call Gallla MeiQS
Communlly Act1on
Agency

The Dally Sentinel

There is work still waiting forJ.ou, .
So you must nol idly stan ,
Do it now while life remaineth
You shall rest in Jesus' land.

Holatoln Anguo Croat Bred
helfo'" ond bulls. 1740)2459557

You could be
eligible for FREE
help getting
back to worlt:

I tJIASSlllfliDSI

Boarding,
Training;
Conditioning, Indoor and
Outdoor riding facilities,
tmtts and waSh bay. 1-74Q.
446-4710

Pum~- ;-,f · ·

New
Heat.
Gas
ffurnacea !.F111e ,..
ES1lmalae. (740)446·6306 , , .,~

,

Four Wheeler, 2000 Honda
Recon, $2000. Farm tractor,
2000 Ford, $4000. Call
{7 401256-8663

Time for Froet Seeding
Pootu'" and Hey Fields. PJV
Broadcaat Seeders, 12 volt,
High Quality. Fila moat ATV.
$295.
Jlm'o
Farm
Equipment, 1740)446-2~

Pomeroy, spacious, 3 bedroom , 1 bath , large lot.
$22,500. Disoount for cash.
{3041837-7507 {740)709·

laid OIIP

· use, rune grea1, lookS gre8t, ~~~~~~~~
4x4, ve, $7500080 .. (740)7~2-4011 •

,'-. I I\ I ' I • II I,

John
Deere
Compact
Tractors. Financing as low
as 4.5% and 0% down with
John Deoro CrodH Approval.
Carmlchol Equipment, Inc.
Hunttng1on. wv (304)736·
2120.
Golllpolto.
OH
(740)446-2412

TO LoAN

VAJIB
&amp;:
4-WDs

I \ 1\\ I '- I 1'1 I II "

J

~~·

~SEIIVI&lt;E!ONAL

hunllng atock, Champion
bloodline. Boxhlld. Ottertail
$150. {740)842288 Roady
nowt

I

~-------·

r

Lab puppies, AKC. Proven

•

INO'nCEI

Second Chance Financial.
looking for a Second
Ch ance
1or borrowmg
·
money or re·establl shi ng
•edll we can hel Good o
c
·
P.
r
bad eradlt accep1ed. ca111o11
F
1 666 576 •555
ree .
•
•
-

For oolt• old Englloh
Shoopdog pupe flrll onott
&amp; wormod. !ov'oblo. 5200
esch call {740)1115-9823
•
Full grown ,Callfomlan rabblta, (7401988 3833

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted, 1 Northman snow blade; 2
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, gravity wagons, (two hunPaUo, Start $385/Mo. No dred bushel). Please calf "' 1•
Pets, Lease Plus Security (740)245-5786 for more
)1•'\1
Deposit Required, Days: information.
74o-446·3481 ; Evenings:
t0x5 utility trailer,.&lt; foot fold· &gt;"\!~~
740•367..0 502 .
- - - - - -- - - down • ramp · - g~te,, $700. ; ;
Twin Rivers Tower Is accept· . (740)742·2180 · ·· '1•1 .-. .. ; :. • •
·
.
·· :
• ,\·&gt;01'
1ng app 11catIons for wa It Ing 2 Railroad
Llir1t~Jt~~ 1 . Q,Q
a
r ....,
.. •
list for Hud· subs!zed, 1· br,
miners
dinner
bucket, 1,.
apartment, call 675-6679
Waterloo Wondsr ~, call
~
EHO
(
'"
740,-8-8293
·
r,
'&gt;·
'~·•
"
-

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
you do business with people
you know, and NOT to send
money through the mail until
you have investigated the
offering.
•
M~

i

AKC, 7 month old Molt
Dechahund, houoebrokln.
all onott, ' $200, no Chec:kJ.
(7401388-8824

Victorian wash bowl &amp; pitch- ..- LJ
er
(Ironstone
England •
1890), $325, {740)992,0274 - '

r10

l'l!:rs
FOR SALE

.ALL• a

Arevou

I.JISStJ
i.J IJIJJ.IL l1\r 'I'HIJ

1984 S-10 Blezer,
AKC Boxer pupe, 7 weol&lt;o 5-epoed, al•. tt~. runo good, - - - - - - - old, ahotl current. Brtndte high miles, $1000. (740)441· 94 Stratoa, 17'8' bus boat,
bloCk &amp; sliver with white botwlllt l&gt;eoutlful ma•klngo. 0443
(740)379-2639
1om, 9'"Y carpet, l20 hp.
1988 Dodge Ram Charger, Evlnrude trolling motor,
AKC Reg. Siberian Huoky 4x4, lull olzo, auto. Iota of rebulh Jut year from lack of
pups, 9 wettcl Old, llreacty new parts, driven dally, use, runs greet, lookl great,
hll'/0 Ill lltota, -med &amp; (740)992-o622
$75000B0.. (740)7~2-40t t
vet c h - . 1 BIICI&lt;NIMe - - - - - - female,
t
Grey/White 1989 SIIYttrado Blazsr, 4x4,
fomole, t Bloclc/WMa malo, good condhlon. may trada 11111""-""!~--;..;,
porenta on thl promloea for
camper,
$4000, r·g
II&lt;H
. $250.00 304-773-5730
(7401742-2307
•
IMPRovDm-mi

Gallipolis Cerear College Brick Ranch, 2 bedroom, 2 2001 14x80 Oakwood, 3 14x60 trailer located at Modern 1 bedroom apart- Buy or · sell . • Riverjne
(Careers Close To Home) bath, garage, on river, 5 BR, 2 bath , all appliances Gleriwood, stove, refridg. , mant {740)446-0390
Antiques, 1124 Easl MaiO :·~·

.,.56 ..~liCilON

eral secretarial and recaptionist duties for the
GradLlBie
Education
Department: assisting with
admissions processes for
Graduate Education, assisting
with
regi strat ion
processes and work lnn
•
directly wit h the Mentor
Program Coordinator. Must

_.ll ~.,r__

AP._FO_IUIThiENJ'
_
S_R_RENr
_

miles south of Gallipolis. Included. We'll make down, microwave furnished- 304·
(740)441-8617
payment, you take over pay- 576·9991.
fessional services .to resi- l'I!~Re::lgl.;-~9~0;:
·0~5;.:
· t~27;,;4::B:;,._, r---~----, manta of $370 month, or buy
for $22,000. {216)351-7066 t4x60 lraller. 3 bedroom. 2
dents
for the
period
or
(216)257-1485.
bath, nice yard, pofet), star·
07/0t /2003· 06/30/2005.
""''"'
age building, central air,
The areas of professional
Porter
area, close to hospiservices are:
Blowout sale on all Single
·
•Phychiatrist
Jennifer Hoback
Section homes save thou- tal, $400 mo &amp; $400 deposft.
-Guardlnship
740-949-2169
sands good until February You pay au utilities, no pets.
Applications available 1403
•Language Development
Co!'1gratulatlonel You hava All I'Niut.re .ctvertlalng
29. (7401446·3093
In thll MWIPIIPII' II
Specialist
won 2 tree movie tickets to
Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis.
•ublect to the Ftdenill
{Speech and Audiology)
the
Spring
Valley
7
"Get Your Money's Worth~ at Call (740)446-4514 day o•
Fair Housing Act ot 1988
All services required are Gallipolis. Call the Sentinel
Coles Mobile Homes, St. At. (740)446·3248 nlghl for
whloh makae It !legal to
part-lime/
intermiltent. for details. 740 992-2155
50
East
ot
Athens. more Information.
advertln "snv
Deliveries,
set·ups,
axcavat•
Interested persons/ parties 1
WANIED
prer.rtnce, llmlltltlon or
2 bedroom mobile home,
lng, foundations, sewage MinersViife area, newly
should submit a letter of
To Do
dlacrlmlnMion baNd on
systems, driveways, heating
intent. together with approntee, ector, religion, HX
references
familial atatus or national
and cooling along with parts redecorated ,
priate license, certification
Childcare available In down- Origin, or sny lntantlon to
required,
deposit
required,
and
service.
You
shOuld
or other credential informa·
town Pomeroy. private pay
m1k1 •ny tuch
accept nothing lass. Sinpa $:)90 · ~er -month, call
lion , and salary require(7401992-6777 after 5pm.
only, proVIding 24 hr. servpreftren~, limitation or
1967 we are Cole's Mobile
ments or fee schedule to:
ice, call {740)992-5827 for
dlacrlmlnlllion."
HomBS where you ~Get Your 2 •·•room mobo·te home
Human Resources Dept.
uvu
•
more information.
Money's Worth .~
Sp ring Valley a•·eo· Extra
2500 Ohio Avenue
·
Thl• newapllpitr will not
Gallipolis, OH 4563 l
nice, all electric. $350 a
knowingly acc:opt
land Home Packages avail· month, $250 depOsit. Call
Phone No: (740)446·1642 Drum Lessons- Snare or
•ctveniHmentt
for
re~l
Drum set. $10. Halt Hour,
able. In your area, {7401446- (740)441-6954 oi (304)675·
Fax No: (7.40)446·1341
Htldl which I• In
$20. Hour. Call Nathan
3384.
2900
TDD: (740)44e-2956
vlolallon of the law. OUr
Vollmar (304)674-!1023
............ htreby
New 14X70, 3 brf2bth, only -3 b&amp;droom mobile home for
Informed tt.t 1111
--------5995
down and only rent , no pets, (740)992·5858
Georges
Portable
Sawmill,
·
ctweUinga •ctv.-tiMd In
REGISTERED
5197.62
per month, Coli
don't
haul
your
logs
to
the
thll nCIWIPiptl' Ire
SONOGRAPHER
Nikki 74Q-385-767t
avllllable on 1n equal
Abdom inal Sonographer, mill just call 304-675-19f)7.
oppootuntty-.
registered or registry eligible
for a full·time or part·time jjji;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
position , in an outpatient
B~
diagnostic center. Excellent
&lt;lPPoJntJNrn'
salary (negotiable.) Fringe t.-lliiiiilioiiiiiliiiiiiiiio;.~
oenelits include Holiday &amp;

'==---

HVAC co mpany looking for
PTIFT certified helpers to do
Heatir g &amp; Cooling installs·
l ion. 1 Also looking for
EKperience d In staller and
Tech with 2 years or more.
Send resumes to P.O. 8o)C
572 . Kerr, OH 45643 .
- - -- - - - IMMEDIATE OpENINGS
Local Office Has 25·50
Openings, No eKperlence
Needed, $6-$9 Per Hour, 1·
888-974-JOBS

Ir M~s~ Ir ~;r.;r&lt;NFS It~.,__

r~---iiiiiiii•-'' r
__

Poi.ICIES: Ohio Valay Publlahlng .....,..... the right to edit, reoject, or cancel any ad .t any time. Errore must btl reported on the flrat d.-y af
Trlbun.lendMf.Rtglatel" will btl r.. ponalbla for no more than tht COlt or the tpact occupied by the errcir and only 1111 flrat ln•rtton. wa shill not be
any loaa or axpenM that multi from ttMI publication or omlnlon of an adv.rtiNfi'Mint. Corr.ctlon will ~ madtl In the tlrat available edition. • Box ...;..~,_.,,1
are always confl.,.....l. • Current m. card apptl". · • All rul Mt.lt lldvertiHmtntt trl tubtfot to the Federal Ftlr Houalng Act of 1988. • Tills ...,...,...., •
accepb only help want.~ ldtl meeting EOE ltlnct.rda. Wa will not knowingly accept any advartlllnt In violation of tn. law.

Cultom
SuUdlng
&amp;
Remodeling for all your
home repair need&amp;, In the
bullnase for over 18 years,
(740)992-1119

r

r

,,.

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

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-P:rlday for In-rtlon
In Next Day•a P•p•r
un,da1y In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

• Start Your Ad1 With A Keyword • Include Complete

Construction
Company
needs one or two experianced workers with building
trades skills. Send resumes
outlining experience and ref·
erences to CLA. 570, c/o
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, P.O.
BoK 46 9. Gallipolis, OH
45631.
vacation Pay, 401 K program
and Health insurance. Hours
Domino's Now Hiring all are Monday thru Friday, with
.ons Pl . PI aasan1, no after hours call. Send
Ioca) 1
Gallipolis, &amp; Pomeroy. Sale resume to CLA 571 • c/o
drivers, must be 18. Apply in Gallipolis Daily Tribune, P.O.
person at locations.
BoK 469, Gallip.olls, OH
45631 .
EASY WORK' EXCELLENT
PAY! Assemble Products at
Home. Call Toll Free 1-800- Sales Manager- Local cellu_46::.:7_·5::.:5~
6::.:
6 .=
E~
xt::.:.1~2~1~
70:__ lar Telephone Company
Foster
Care
glvera needs a sales manager. to
the Purtsmouth/
Needed, Become a thera- cover
peutic foster care giver. You Gallipolis area. Previous
sales eMperience a must.
will be Reimburse $30·S45 a
day tor the care of child in Please taM resume to
1740)353·2913
your home. Training will
begin January. r:or more - - - - - - - - informatio n call
Oasis The Univers 1
·ty of R1'o
Th
r c
.
erapeu IC
are Ql vers Grande invites applications
N t
k Alb
Oh 1011
·
any,
·
for the P0 "~1110
. n of secretary
j e war
, 877
325 , 558
~r.=
e•:_•·:_~·=~
·
for the Graduate Education
Help wanted caring for lhe D e P a r I m e n t .
elderly, Darst Group Home. Responsibilities lor the fullnow paying minimum wage, time position include. but are
new shifts: 7am·3pm, 7am- not limited to, providing gen-

Losl· male white/tan BoKer,
red co llar. on Crew Ad.
Pomeroy, Sat , tamit y pet,
(740)992·6936
Spm, 3pm-11pm, 11pm?am, call 740-992-5023.
LOST- Reward, white male
Pomeranian puppy, Spnng HouseKeeper! babysitter,
Valley area , missing since 2- with experience. org anized
3-03. Childs pet. Please catt femal e w!th own transportstio n
2:30-4 :30pm M-F,
(740)446·6194
$10.00 per hour. (304)6754792 eveni ngs.

Wi\NfED

..'

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

•lrl'

Word Ads

" I H\ It I "'

~

•

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomero~
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailysentinel.com

I \11'1 0\ \ II\ I

ANNOIJNCEMENlS 1

1\.egtster

.

94 Mltsublehe Montero,
SUV. Sunroof. all outo. 7
seater, 100.000 miles. 4wheot drive. Coll(3041875·
7965

I

i

•

;

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

r

n:

. i'

Offee llo~~

\\\Ol \(I \ I I ' l'-1

r ,

Sentinel

aiding, carpe ntry, doors.
windows, baths, mobile
88 Chovy 1500 4x4, 340, 5 home repair and lnore. For
op, high mtteo, $2500 OBO, fret eatlmate call Chat, 740992-8323.
(740]742-401 t

r

'.•

.,

t

Superior
Home
96 Chovy Lumina, 39,000 II Suburban 2500, 4&gt;4,
Maintenance. We do all
actual mllea, nice $5000 454 cubic inch, automatic, repairs
on
homes .
_~•_m_.(7-40~)37_9_·904_7_ _ _ vary good condHion. Carpemry, plumbing, noora,
10&amp; 12-~yard
woter tanks. (740)« 1.&lt;J113
96 Ch•yotor Clrrue LXI , (740)379-2218
t&gt;ultdlngo, available In 9' lhru
21' .-a! oldo &amp; root, 8'x8'11" 57,000 miles, $5250 080.
(740)256-1618 (7401258· For sals ortrade, 11190 Aatro
mini roll·up door; 40x84x13'
1252
van Ext., will trade for email
shop building, 1-3 entry. 3car
or pick-up truck or equal
12x12 overheads guHer
~
v~ue
3()4.675-5413
painted IIHI lidos &amp; roof,
insulated roof, erected price
$20, 108.00;
30x40x9'4'
1988 Ford Ranger, V-6, 5·
MOI'ORCVIU8
garage, 3--10x8 insul over·
opiiOd,
PB.
PS,
Nne
excel·
headl, 1-3' entry, lnoulatad
tent. $1400 080 (740)«1· 1988 Yamaha Blaster 4
roof gutter, 1' overhang
wheeler, nms II. looke good,
0131 after Spm.
painted atoel aides &amp; roof,
rebulh motor &amp; stainless
erected.
$10,157.00;
1992 GMC, 1 ton, single Fmh pipe, $1100, (740)992·
24x42x9'4' gorage. t-3'
wheel, diesel, auto, air, runs 9966
entry, 2·20x8' lnsu! over.
great, good
condition,
heads, inaul root, painted
$2699, {7401992·7584
1998 Yamaha Kod iak, 4
steel aides &amp; roof 1' over·
whoot dnvo. good condition.
hang gutter, erected price
2001 F·250, Superduty, XL $2900 DBO (740)992.0S12
$9967 .00; Precision Post paCkage, 4x4, 5.4 V·6, tow ~~·~·,_..;.
• ;...~.-..;...o,
F'"me Btdro, 740-742-4011, pocksge, 29,000 miles..
BoAlS&amp;: Murolts
1·60D-398-3026
AIC, cruleo, tilt, $16.500.
FORSAi.E
{740)379·2757
Block, brick, HWOr plpos,
· windoWs, llntolo, etc. Claude Slide In trucl&lt; camper fo• 94 Slratoa, 17'6' bus boat,
blaCk &amp; silva• with white botWlntero, Rto G'"n&lt;le, OH eale, 17401992•2623
Call 740-2~5121.
tom, g'"y carpet, 120 hp.

....1

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

(740)7~2-401

NOTICE: 11 .hereby
given
!hot
on
Saturdly, Febnttlry 8,
2003, 11 10:00 a.m., 1
public 1111 will be
held II 211 Will
Second
StrMI,
~y. Ohio, In the
perking tot of The
Fermo111 Bonk •nd
Bevlnge
Comp1ny.
Tho Fermera B1nk
and
Slvlngo
Compttny 11 oolllng
for ceoh In hltnd or
certHied check the fol·
lowing colllllf'll:
1812 Ford TeurUI
F
1
5
0
1FACPI2UIN0213111
1811
Ford Eocort
1FAPP11JIMW3831TT
1bo F1rmon 81nk
and
Sovlnge
Compttny, Pom1roy,
Ohio, rollrVII tho
right to bid 11 lhlo
Hie, end to wlthd,.,.
the ebovo colloterol
prior to Hie. l'urther,
Tho Fermera link
end
Sovlngo
Compeny
rooerYoo
the rlllht to
1ny

r-toct

t 997 CaVIller, 2D, automot·
or Ill blde IUbmltted.
!c. $24115; 1998 Grand Am,
The
lbOVI
2D. $34116. Thrtl 19115
deecrlbed cofleterol
Grand Amo. 17 olhero In
will be IOid "II 11llock. COOK MOTOfll
where II", with no

oxprened or Implied
worrenty glvon.

For turlhor Inform•
tlon, or for on appoint·
menllo lnlpecl colla!·
11111, prior Ia ulo dlle
contect
Cyndlo
Rodriguez at 91122138.

(2) 5, 8, 7

PUBLIC NOTICE
Ruttend Townehlp
TruotMI Will tiki
-1111 bldl f O r -

l8ry mowlltfl contnct
for
Mllol
end
Robinson Cometerloo
for the 2003 m-lng
-•on- Cemeterleltc
Ill mowed at Ieist ten

~~~ throughout lht

yeor.

SucCIIIlul bidder must provide
mower11 end provide
proof ot lllblllty lnsurence. Sellod bldo
mUll 1M rte~lvld by
tho T-nohlp by 4
p.m. Monday Meroh 4
to
the
Rutlend
Townehlp Truete11,
P.O. 8011 321, Rutlend,

own

OH 41711. Tl¥o ,.,_.
encee Nqulrecl.
Opelllyor, Clark

740-7·2-2805

February 8th
6:30pm
·1st pack $10.00
After that $5.00 each
Starburst $1850
AMERICAN LEGION
MIDDLEPORT
Pomeroy Eagles #2171
Sweetheart Dance
February Bth
7 pm • 11 pm
Free food will be served!
The band will be
~:;mmtv

Road 5

Sonshine Circle
Bake Sale
February 8th
Dorcas Church
The band Country Roads
will be performing at the
Pomeroy Eagles Ariel #2171 ,

Friday, Feb. 7 and
Saturday, Feb. 8

(2) 7

(740~103

•'

•

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

•

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, February 7; 2~

Healthy old age depends
on lifestyle changes now
DEAR ABBY: I am in my
mid-50s and look forward to
traveling with my husband
when he takes early retirement
next year. My mother died at 82
with Alzheimer's disease, and
lately, if I misplace my sunglasses or forget somebody's
name. I become terrified that
Fm coming down with it, too.
I have heard there are cer·
tain brain exercises people
can follow to keep from los·
ing our memories as we ~et
older. My husband says I m
silly to worry about th1s now,
but if there's anything I can
do to protect myself from
- future problems, I want to get
started. Any suggestions? WORRIED SILLY IN L.A.
DEAR
WORRIED:
Although a family history of
Alzheimer's does increase
your risk, my ex~rts tell me
that recent scientific data esti·
mate that only one-third of
what determines memory
ability and long-term brain
health is genetically programmed. The other twothirds are actually dictated by
things that are under our own
control, such as lifestyle and
personal health choices. Thus,
as we age, we have far more
influence over our own brain
fitness and memory abilities
than we ever imagined.
It is not "silly" to be con-

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
cemed about getting a head
start on preventing age-related
memory loss. I spoke with Dr.
Gary Small, director of the
UCLA Center on Aging, who
·says it is never too early to
begin protecting our brains. In
his book, "The Memory
Bible," Dr. Small explains that
our brains actually begin to
show signs of aging when we
are in our early 20s. He outlines ways to protect our brain
function with healthy diet,
mental aerobics, memory techniques and stress reduction.
Organizations like the
UCLA Center on Aging
(www.aging.ucla.edu)
and
AARP (www.aarp.org) also
provide information and programs about healthy lifestyles
and ways to stave off many
age-related diseases. Check
them out. It may give you some
much needed peace of mind.
DEAR ABBY: For the past
six years, I've had a problem

with my younger sister,
"Robin." She "borrows" my
clothes and other things from
my room without asking, and
then isn't smart enough to put
them back. Every time I walk
by Robin's room, I find aneth·
· er artie!~ of my CI!Jthing,
shoes or Jewelry on the floor.
When I confront my sister in
front of our parents, Mom
rolls her eyes and says she's
tired of my complaints. Then
Dad will ask Robin pointblank if she "really d1d it,"
and she 'II say, "Yes, but I was
about to return it." That's it,
end of story. It's happened too
many times to count.
Last summer, I put a keyed
lock on my door, which helped
with the problem until the lock
was mysteriously filled , with
"goop." It never worked after
that. Just yesterday, I found an
expensive
dry-clean-only
sweater of mine on Robin's
floor. She had tossed it in the
washer and dryer, and it was
ruined. When f told Mom, she
went out and bought me a new
one, but just tonight I found
one of my shirts on Robin's
floor • also ruined.
I'll be moving out in July to
go to college, but until then, I
need some advice. Please help
me, Abby - nobody ·else
will. - COUNTING THE
MONTHS IN MASON

CITY, IOWA
DEAR COUNTING THE
MONTHS: Your parents have
been negligent in their responsibility to your little Sister.
They have failed to teach her
responsibility, honesty, and
respect for the possessions and
boundaries of others. This will
come back to haunt them - and
your sister • in the future.
Please show them this column
and hang on until July. Your
trials are almost over.
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
1 Menu

P2":.&gt;

4 trad•
· punchea
8 "Weird
11 Spring

formlll

12 Tiberlus'

em.

readings
41 Gun·
slinger's
t ..ly
43 Ttmp11 Bay

~='If

44
out
45 Beam
48 Fable•
52 Politician
-Landon
53 Frau's

13
up
14 Neutral

lbode
55 Carbon

15 Desert

56 Ump
57 Nobelist

tone

depoalt

dwaller
16 Befort
17 Prickly
weed

19 Fillets a
fish ·
21 Cartoon
shriek
22 Goal
23 I.a. words
28 Lure
29 Noah'•
craft
30 EEC
currency
32 Gossip
34 Holiday

aong

36 Dada, to
granddada
38 Modam ·
39 Church

-Wienl
58 Only
59 Nutrllloua
bean
60 Remainder
61 Diligent
Insect

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

10 Does batik
lairs
11 Favorite
37 Cozy
1B Chapeau' a 40 Vandroll ·
or Burbank
place
20 Not Include 42 Black Sea ·
22 Soon, to
city
Juliet
44 Assail
23 Writer
45 Bumps
DOWN
-Fleming 46 Low-fat
24 Fall
·
spread
.
Curved
25 Barely
./ 47 Uncertain.
entrance
scrapes by 48 San .
Pelty or
26 Piccadilly
Obispo _•
Loughlin
atatue
49 Lunch time
Diverts
.27 Unable
50 Slmplet011 ·
Hunt
28 TVA supply 51 •Fr. holy •
Tiny hole
31 Green
woman : ·
Khan of no1e
Beret's org. 54 Malt
:•
CoHonlall . 33 Utility bill
beverage . •
AJar
abbr.
;
Venture
35 Chemists'

The

newspaper
is a valuable
learning tool
for students
~.~ of all ages.
It connects
the principles
and facts they learn in the
classroom with stories
and events that m:e

happening here and
around the

Astrograph
even though you may realize
you're being had.
BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL
TAURUS (April 20-May
An opportunity to team up
20) - It behooves you to
with others for a mutual purmake a conscientious effort to
pose could develop through
be more open-minded today,
an alliance you make in the
in order to offset the strong. ·
year ahead. If there is money • opinionated attitude you're
likely to adopt at this time.
involved. be sure all contracts
and legalities are securely tied
Don't be so self-involved.
down . '
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
- If your expectations are
19) - Avoid situations today
grander than your contribuwhere you place yourself in
tions today, you will end up
the middle. hoping to appease
being greatly disappointed
two dissident !actions . It
w"ith what you receive for
could be a recipe for a threeyour efforts. Be realistic as to
way donnybrook.
what they are worth.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
CANCER (June 21 -July
20) - Over the last few days,
22) - There can be a fine
things may have come to you
line between being frugal and
without your having to ex· · being stingy. If others see you
pend too much effort. Today,
as the latter today, you won't
· that might come to an end, · receive any high marks where
and if you're not on your toes,
your human relationships are
it could leave you defenseconcerned.
~ss .
·
LEO (July· 23-Aug. 22) !\RIES (March 21 ·April
Be careful that you don't be19) - Someone who knows
come too demanding when at·
you are a soft touch may hit
tempting to achieve your ends
on you again today and take
today. It's a lot smarter to
advantage of your generous
make a good impression on
nature. Sadly. you 'll ante up
associates and get them on
Saturday. Feb. 8. 2003

~ \SiqH : . T t-l't.EC&gt; To
...:I
A Ul=t:

;

your side.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-Any presentation you have
to make today in promoting
something you're trying to
sell, whether it be goods or an
idea. needs to be brief and to
the point if you are to be effective. Don't oversell.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Turning down a loan to a
friend today that you can't afford to make is not being insensitive, it's merely being realistic . Don't let anyone tell
you otherwise.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Discord defeats, agreement advances. In order for a

joint venture to succeed to·
day, both parties must be in
total accoril with one another
concerning the primary objective. Do your part.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) - If you allow your
fun activities to take precedence over your responsibilities, there will be a big price
to pay later on. Be reliable.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - Be very careful
when handling things thai are
not your own. Being inattentive can cause clumsiness and
ill-fated accidents to occur,
for which you'll be held ac·
countable.

WORD®©®0@@®®®·
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WORD SCRIMMAGE"mJOID
SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMIIIUCK
...
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111 DOWN

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JUDD'S TOTAL

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122

87

319

Answer
to

previous
Word

Scrim·

mage ·

~~~~~~~
AVERAGE GAME 17&amp;-115

by JUDD HAMBRICK

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woraa Q11 1 60-polnt bonue. AI worOe can be touncl 1n Wlbltl(a New WOitd

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JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

1'!i P1IE11Y Sl~; ~ou

JUSt IIIATCI\ 1\tE 9\.A'IiRS.

~
~

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ALL TI-IEV WANTED ME FOR
WAS TO DRIVE TJ.IE ZAMBON i l

r0.,·
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&lt;,&gt;()IJ'RI! THINKING&gt;. "WHY

DOe~N·-r .JON Feet7 Me ?"
.. . RICiH1?

AC.TUA~~V.

11 WA~, "WI-iY

liOE5N'1 PORK rov fEEP ME?"

A Special Supplement to the
~alltpolis 19atlp ~rtbune

tlotnt ~Iea,ant l\egtster
Daily Sentinel
.

'•

---··- ·--

'

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