<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5642" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5642?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T04:50:57+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15572">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/9ce0918bde6878d4ec80237a126c393e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>25769540caf8501f6c75cce7c12e0bf5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="19044">
                  <text>Page 88 • The

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 13, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Southem, Eastem win sectional titles, B 1

•

, ~~)
(9'

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 126

www.mydailysentinel.com

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2003

l

Meigs commissioners mull New Crew Road complaints
R!o .Pr~nde

BY BRIAN

Bluegrass
concert

• The Esther Allen
Greer Museum at the
University
of Rio
Grande is hosting "The
Works of Antonio
Fra~coni ," from 1 to 5
p.m., Thesdays through
Sundays. Frasconi spe- .
cializes in the art of
woodblock printing and
has also designed covers
for books, magazines
and albums. For information, call (740) 2455353.

• The Vern Riffe
Center for the Arts at
Shawnee
State
University is the place to
be for great bluegrass
music at 7 p.m. · on
Saturday.
Tickets are $1 0 for
general
admission.
There are no reserved
seats. Tickets can be
purchased at the door or
m advance at Shawnee
Animal Clinic, the
Journey
Within,
Warman's Prescription
Service in Portsmouth,
from Headlines in
Wheelersburg;
from
Gahm's Pharmacies in
West Portsmouth and in
Lucasville, from Sierra's
Haven Board Members
and
from
Greg
Romanello.
Tickets
may
be
ordered by phone at
(740) 353-5758.

Q,q,({i~g!i~:
Portrait
display

•
"Capturing the
Spirit," a display of pastel portraits by Laurie
Shartholtzer on display
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily
unti I March 2 at the
French Art Colony, 530
First Ave. Free. admisSion
For information, contact Mary Bea McCalla
at (740) 446-3834, or by
e-mail at facart@zoomnet.net.

Bourbon St.
Brawlers
• The Bowbon Street
Brawlers will perfonn at
8 p.m. Friday at the State
Theater. This performance was originally
scheduled for Feb. 6 but
had to be changed to Feb.
13. Tickets are $15 each
and are still available. If
you need additional
information,
contact
members of the Point
Pleasant Artist Series Jane Coles at (304) 6752719 or Betty Kauff at
(304) 675- 3746.

·'Charlotte's
Web'
• The presentation
performed by Theatre
Works USA begins at
9:30 a.m. and 12:30
p.m., Feb. 20-21, at
Paramount Arts Center,
as pan of the Youth
Education Series.
Reservations
are
required. Call (606) 3243175.

Tea
party
•
The
Greater
Huntington Park and
Recreation District hosts
the Disney Princess tea
party, 10 a.m. Saturday,
Ritter
Park
Rose
Garden. Open to children ages 3 to 5.
Admission $8. The
Cabell County Fair
Queen, dressed in her
ball gown, reads a story.
Participants may bring a
princess dress or dress
up in one of the sponsor's dresses. For informatiort, (304) 696-5954.

REED

Staff writer

Art show

r(

J.

Dance

The Ariel Theater presents
Idletymes, along with Tyler Tuttle,
"The kid that can tap dance," 7:30
p.m. Saturday. Advance tickets for
adults are $10; for children up to 12
$5. At the door, adult tickets are
$12; children, $5. Purchase tickets
at The Purple Thrtle, Tawney
Jewlers and OakHill Banks.

• A Sweetheart Dance
will be held from 7 to I 0
p.m. Friday at the
Henderson Community
Building. Music by
''The Cowboy." All ages
welcome (under 13
requires escort). The
building corqmittee will
provide concessions.
Admission is $2 per person.

POMEROY - Meigs County commissioners will consider appropriating
a private drive in a Pomeroy-area subdivision on behalf of Chester
Township, but will first investigate
terms of the subdivision's approval in
1991.
A delegation of residents of a New
Crew Road subdivision developed by
John Fisher met Thursday with commissioners to ask their help in taking
public control of the road.
Those landowners allege that Fisher

• There will be a
Valentine's Day dance
with a DJ, from 7 to 10
p.m. Friday, at the
Southside Community
Center.
Donations
accepted at the door.

Gifts for all occasions, Home
Decoratlne, and Gardening Needs!

BY BRIAN

POMEROY - Snow may
be free when it comes from
the skies, but it is expensive
to clean up.
Kathy Hysell, clerk-treasurer, said the village spends
$2,500 to clear snow and ice
from the streets each year.
The harsh winter weather has
forced the village to spend
more than $3,000 for salt and
calcium this year.
Salt is used to rid streets of
ice and snow. Calcium is
used when temperatures dip
close to freezing to keep the
salty/brackish muck on the
streets. from refreezing. . _
·-': 11te village 1\ll:~~urchased
another two loads of salt, or
33 tons, from Su~ar Run Mill
in · Pomeroy. Th1s will cost
about $1 ,200 in addition to
$300 more for delivery.
Hysell said the salt should
arrive within the next few
days. The village has plans to
purchase another two loads if
winter weather does not
cooperate.
If another snowstorm hits
before this salt arrives, the
village still has enough salt
and calcium to keep the
streets clear.
Hysell said if a huge snow
s"torm blankets the village,
then the county could declare
an official "emergency." This
would qualify the village to
receiv~ funds
from the
Federal
Emergency
Management Agency to help
clear the streets.
Two large trucks disperse
the salt and calcium. Four
workers, who also work in
the street department, are
responsible for clearing the
streets. This extra time spent
clearing the streets at all
hours of the day and night

PluH He Snow, AS

2

Sections- 1&amp; Pllps

Calendar
Classifieds
&lt;::omics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies
Obituaries
Sports .
Weather

A4
85-6
87
87
A6
A3
A3
A5
81-4
A2

OIL CHANGE

011 a Filltr • Lube Ch1His
Ched All Fluids • Ched Chouls

$1795

On Hle&lt;t nt04tll

(4) TIRE ROTATION
&amp; BALANCING
Savt Money 1nd
Keep Your F1mily s.ft

$2295

··'"
SUPERPACK
I - 1 Bolondnt
1... CJf"'"' Oil Chonro • nresRototlon95
*

Crow's Family Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

Cardiovascular coordinator Laura Horsley reads to students at Heart of the Valley Head Start When Horsley is done with
her tale, these students will know the importance of the heart in time for Valentine's Day. For the complete story, please
see page A5. (J . Miles Layton)

Syracuse drops.trash pick-up ordinance
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

~.

~neil

.

voted unanimoUsly .
,,:/to \fold the ordinance, . ·
.,:~''/jutying that it did not
·
,.. ·~·~serve the customer,
' ., , the village or.. the
hauler well
.'

News editor
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village
Council has voided its garbage and rubbish collection ordinance and will consider another one at its next meeting.
It was the general consensus of council members, who voted unanimously
to void the ordinance, that it did not
serve the customer, the village or the
hauler well, and needed further discussion and possible revisions.
The ordinance containing provisions
about licensing fees, insurance and
bonding, limitations on bags, use of
dumpsters and senior -citizens charges,
will be reconsidered by the ordinance·

.
'"
committee and then brought back to
counciL
Mark Norman of First Class Trash
Removal met with council to discuss
some of the requirements of the ordinance. He said that for him to fultill
those requirements would mean he
would have to charge more for service
to the 210 residents he serves.

Southern Ohio Tmsh Service, which
also has customers in the village,
declined to submit a quote for pickup
service, noting that because of some
provisions in the ordinance, it would be
a "great quote risk for the company to
submit a proposal at this time."
Currently, there are several haulers
coming into the village to collect rubbish and trash. There are no village fees
for doing that at this time.
It was announced that Christopher
Thoms, an environmental specialist of
the Floodplain Management Program
will hold a community meeting at 7
p.m. Tuesday at village hall to answer
questions about the National Flood
Insurance Program.

,Bu'* oa,.~DI$ttate
to{
·syracuse by VIllage ~C~uncil · . .
*'
"''",·~. ~~·
·.~.
,;, rn 01ber actioos.[t
· ' U·• dllwn
;···· made
a debi$ion to tear lnc.program;
·•
· were Mayor Bill R911sh,•and
alSo: , ~. .···· ·· • .• ,, ·.-•;. l
· thll J'ClSiltioQIS at the
• approved purchase of ~ouncil
members Eric
I

l

,

•~ l!"WPlnted lt~ ~ . ij roadside .. (ll!tk ;:'!'ecause dt
V,ill\1-R.. wollld too.~pe.IJ&amp;lve to renotfficttve "-P!'IJ. .1. pe~ \late ~em; . •
!Xllbi'Iedoo~of requhtili'iiif.
• diSol!ssed what needed t¢
ii1g Willi wary 10.tW; ~ later; be · done 11i London Pool
~~¢ 1 fo! -thl;

•heard,abouttbe~of before it can be· opened this
Rlc,lc Cllimeey in beCoilllng sunllll!:r;
grJiol8 a4minislrat0r fOr the
• decided to make applica-

Village ~ith action ~ing lion for a fire ·lr!Jck ~gh
tabled until another llleretiJ1g. the Government AcqutsJttohS

HOLZER
CARDIOVASCULAR
INSTITUT~

· eq~ipment for the po~ice
cru1ser an.d some testing .
materials reques,ted by •the
town mmhal, Bnan Pearce.
• and expressed apprecialion ~o Do~ .Hubbard for
dooatinJ! a pitching ~hine
and battmg cage to lhe v11lage
· for install.ation in ihe park..
_ Attendmg the meeung

Cunilin8Jwri, Michalll Deem,
DOnn!\ Peterson, Eber
Pickens
Jr.
Michael
VanM te and
Wood
Oth~rsr anen:i'g we~
Mi h 1 ·Ral t
.· t _
c ae
~ on, mam e
nance su_pemsor, and B_ob
Byer, director of Me1gs
Emergency Management.

M

REED

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

(740) 446·5354

Drive-Thnl WIDdow

992-5432
'•

'

POMEROY
Meigs
Emergency Services has
received a $6,000 grant for
the purchase of three new
automatic external defibrillators, to be placed in police
cruisers.
EMS Administrator Gene
Lyons met with Meigs
County
commissioners
Thursday to discuss the
grant award from the state,
which will allow the placement of the new equipment
in Pomeroy and Middleport
police cruisers abd in a
deputy sheriff's cruiser, to
be used in the event of a
medical emergency.
"In many cases, police
officers are on the scene of a
medical crisis before emergency medical crews,"
Lyons said. "With this
equipment in place, there's
an opportunity to save
lives."
'
Lyons said additional
funding will be sought for
the purchase of additional
AED machines , which
would be placed in other
police vehicles throughout
the county. and possibly, in
public buildings such as the
courthouse.
Lyons said the grant also
provides for the eight hours
of training necessary for
operating the machines.
The EMS office is "almost
assured" of two grant awards
for additional equipment and
training through the Ohio
EMS, Lyons said. The application for the grant is April
I , and a grant amount has
not been determined.
During their business
meeting, commissioners:
• Approved transfers of
itnds and new fund accounts
for general fund line items;
• Approved a contract with
the County Risk Sharing
Authority for li ability and
property damage insurance,
at a total cost of $128,000
for a 14-month pol icy period;
• Approved an animal
claim for Bryan Lyn ch.
Bedford Township, in tbe
amount of $ 100.
Pre se nt
were
Commissioners
Jeff
Thornton, Mick Davenport.
and Jim Sheets. and Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

Diagnostic

For more information, call

228 Mlin St.

----- - - - -

J.

Staff writer

Norris Northup Dodge

r------'..::._:_::L_:_,
446-0842

Heart
machines
going into
police
•
cru1sers

Bv J. MtLES lAYToN

BEST DEAL IN TOWN
252 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Ohio

subdivision resident, said the residents . "Now, we're left with 12 nice
have tried to meet with Fisher to homes and a fann lane, and I hal doesresolve issues relating to road mainte- n't reflect well on development efforts
nance, and said many of the property in Meigs County," he added.
owners have written or verbal agreeResidents said 17 school children
ment from Fisher to U!Jgrade and live on the roadway, and a bus now
maintain the road.
turns around in a private driveway,
"Someone droJ?ped the ball in 1991 , and said the road is growing increaswhen the subdivtsion was approved," ingly unsafe.
Perrin said.
Commissioners agreed to m6et
"It wasn't this board, and it wasn't again with interested parties on March
the homeowners. It appears to have 20, and said efforts wi II be made in the
been the developer, the planning com- meantime to investigate Meigs
mission which approved the plans, County Planning Commission records
and the board of commissioners who to determine the terms of the subdivisigned off on the plans."
sion's approvaL

Staff writer

C&gt; 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Nothing Measures Up To BOB'S
when it comes to •..

until it is brought to standard condition.
"We don't have a problem taking
the road as a public road, but at this
time, we don't have the funds necessary to bring it up to our standards,"
Chester Township Trustee El mer
Newell said.
County Engineer Eugene Triplett
has estimated the cost of repairs at
anywhere from $79,370 for a coldmix surface, to $90,513 for hot-mix on
the half-mile road. That cost also
includes culvert installation, grading
and utility relocation.
Jonathan Perrin, an attorney and

Snow day Tell us.a story
costs
mount for
Pomeroy

Index
Dance

promised to maintain and upgmde the
road until it could be taken over by the
township, but said the road will soon
be impassable due to lack of maintenance and ongoing drainage problems.
The residents have circulated a petition, containing the signatures of 21
property owners, asking the commissioners to appropriate the roadwar
through eminent domain, and tum tt
over to the township trustees for future
maintenance.
Trustees, meanwhile, say the road
does not meet their minimum standards and they will not consider
assuming maintenance responsibilities

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather

BY ANDREW CARTER

News editor
UICH.

l

•

Toledo
_______ ...............W/24'
___ ____ .,......... "!

IND.

~;.)

.,'
Dayton !2PI23"

•IColumbuo l23' /24' I

!

•

KY.
Cl2003 AccuWeather, Inc.

&lt;&gt;'~ --·-····

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

Showers

T-stoon1

Rain

FkJnies

Snow

Ice

Sleet, snow follow rainfall
steady in the lower 30s.
Northeast winds 10 to 15
mph. Chance of precipitation
90 percent.
Saturday night...Occasional
sleet or snow. Any accumulation expected to be light.
Lows 10 the upper 20s.
Chance of snow 80 percent.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Sleet or snow likely. Any accumulation expected to be light. Highs near 30.
Chance of snow 70 percent.
Sunday night...Cloudy with
scattered snow showers.
Lows in the lower 20s.
Chance of snow 40 percent.
VV a s h i n g t o n ' s
Birthday... Cioudy. Scattered
snow or rain showers in the
morning, then scattered
showers from early afternoon
on. Highs in the lower 40s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mtd 20s and
highs in the mid 40s.
VVednesday... Partly cloudy.
A chance of showers until
midnight, then a chance of
snow or rain showers late.
Lows near 30 and highs in the
upper40s.
Thursday... A chance of
showers in the' morning, otherwise partly cloudy. Lows in
the mid 30s and highs in the
mid40s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A storm system over the
Plains states will move east
across the lower Ohio Valley
to the east coast over the
weekend. Precipitation will
spread into thwe area this
afternoon and early tonight.
Rain is expected from
Cincinnati on south.
The rain will change to
freez ing rain and snow late
tonight and there will likely
be enough snow and ice to
cause travel problems to the
Ohio River.
Drier air will begin to filter
in Saturday. cutting off the
snow. Snow will likely linger
across the central and southern counties right into sunday
with some additional accumulation possible. Arctic air
wi II spread back across the
area over the weekend. High
temperatures will be generally in the 20s.
·Weather forecast:
Tonight...Occasional rain,
sleet or freezing rain. Little or
no snow accumulation. Lows
in the lower 30s. East winds
around 10 mph. Chance of
precipitation near I 00 percent.
Saturday... Occasional sleet
or rain. Total accumulation,
up to I inch. Temperatures

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Feb. 13,2003

10,000

Dow

---9.000

Jones
4&gt;-

7,749.87
Pd. change
lrom prevkJug,

..0.11

NOV

H!F

7,781 .89

DEC
Low
7,828.99

JAN

FEB

7 000
•

Rooordhlgh: 11,722.98

Jan. 14, 2000

Feb. 13,2003

1,600

Nasdaq
compos It
•1 ••&lt;
FEB

1,2n.44
Pet change

I ,OOO

Record high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

from previoos: ..0.12

Feb. 13,2003

1,000

Standard
&amp; Poor's
. '

·-··~

,'\;31

800

f"·~

700

817.37
Pet

cha"\J"

from preVIOUS

Low
806.29

·0.16

Recant high: 1,527.46
March 24. 2000

AP

Local Stocks
AEP- 20.40
Arch Coal-16.79
Akzo - 22 .54
AmTech/SBC- 22.45
Ashland Inc. - 27.62
AT&amp;T - 17.49
Bank One- 35
BLI - 11 .03
Bob Evans - 21 .86
BorgWarner - 52.30
Champion- 3.19
Charming Shops 3.39
City Holding - 28.90
Col - 20.21
DG - 10.51
DuPon1 - 37 .1B

Federal Mogul - .11
USB- 20.15
Gannen- 70.54
General Electric
22.17
GKNLY - 2.75
Harley Davidson
40.21
Kmart - .10
Kroger- 13.81
Lid. -11 .30
NSC - 18.93
Oak Hill Financial 23.30
OVB - 22.23
BBT - 31 .78
Peoples- 24.25

Friday, February 14, 2003_

Strickland named to veterans' committee

•

Saturday, Feb. 15

.._

PageA2

Pepsico - 38.90
Premier - 8.12
Rockwell - 21.34
Rocky Boots - 5.06
AD Shell - 38.83
Sears - 21.58
Wai· Mart- 47 .64
Wendy's - 24.87
Worthington - 13.71
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, pro·
vided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

WASHINGTON - U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland, who represents Ohio's Sixth
Co ngressional District, has been named
to serve on the House Committee on
Veterans Affairs.
."I want to be an advocate for veterans,
and this co mmittee gives me a platform
to challenge the wrongheaded decisions
that are hurtin g veterans in my
Congressional District and across
America," Strickland said.
"The VA healthcare system is facing a
crisis, and the administration's proposed
solutions are simply going from bad to
worse," he added.
The Lucasville Democrat was appointed to the committee on Tuesday by the
House Democratic Caucus.
According to reports from Strickland's
office, a special waiver was needed to
clear his appointment since he also
serves on he House Committee on
Energy and Commerce, one of four socalled exclusive · committees in the
House of Representatives. He has served
on that committee since being reelec ted
in 1996. ·
In other news from Strickland's office
this week, the congressman voted
against legislation Wednesday that
would have allowed the Federal Trade
Commission to establish a " Do Not Call
List" for Jelemarketers.
Strickland said he voted against the

bill because of concerns for jobs in the
Sixth District and so-called special loopholes for politicians.
" It 's counterproductive at a time when
our nation is facing near record unemployment that Congress would take and
action that cold put thousands more
Americans out of jobs," he said. "My
congressional district alone has nearly a
tho usand people employed by the telemarketing indusll)'., This vote today was
cast for them and their families."
Strickland said the loophole in the bill
would have allowed politicians to place
calls through a third party to solicit campaign contributions and votes, while preventing telemarketers from making calls
through a third party. He said politicians
would have had access to numbers on
the " Do Not Call" list.
"I understand the frustration of being
interrupted by marketers and salespeople
as you try to enjoy your dinner or time
with your family. It can be annoying and
intrusive,'" Strickland said.
"But this rushed legislation gives little
consideration to the thousands of
Americans who make their living as tetemarketers, and provides no relief for
those who may lose their jobs as a result
of Congress's rush to gain some positive
public relations points," he added.
According to Strickland, about 300
people are employed at call centers in
Gallipolis, Marietta and Boardman. The
Gallipolis center, according to his office,
is the second largest employer in the

county behind Holzer Medical Center.
Also on Wednesday, Strickland intro-.
duced legislation designed to deny feder-·
al government contracts to compan1es
whose CEOs do not certify their finan.
cial reports.
. ..
The Respons1b1hty m Federal·
Contracts Act, according to Strickland,
would serve to enhance the SarbanesOxley Act sig ned into law last August by :
prohibiting the federal govern'."ent from .
granting contracts ~o com~ames who~e
CEOs fail to s1gn off on thetr company s
periodic financial report to the Securities
and Exchange Commission.
The bill would also requ ire the SEC to
make available to the public a li st of
companies .whose CEOs do not certify ·
their reports.
While Sarbanes-Oxley requires CEOs
to certify reports and contains penalties ·
for certifying fal se reports, there is no
penalty for failing to certify reports ..
Corporate filings with the SEC are pub-.
lie record, but the commission is nor
required to make a list of companies ·
whose CEOs do not compl y with the law
available to the public.
"The bill makes sure the federal gov- ·
ernment deals with scrupulous compa- :
nies that have demonstrated they will be
good stewards of not only their share- ·
holders' trust, but public money as well,""
Strickland said. "If the top official of a
company refuses to vouch for its hon-:
esty, then that company should not be·
trusted by the federal government."
·

Spending bill full of Ohio projects passes:
WASHINGTON (AP) Money for dozens of Ohio projects, including the NASA
Glenn Research Center in
Cleveland and an undeigiUund
railroad museum in Cincinnati,
is included in a $397.4 billion
spending bill approved by
Congress.
The massive bill pays for
every federal agency but the
Pentagon for the last two-thirds
of this year's budget, ending
the stalemate that began last
year when President Bush
demanded lower s~nding than
many in Congress wanted.
This week has been marked
by last-minute House-Senate
bargaining, which resulted in a
swollen bill that was debated
heavily in both houses. A Bush
spokeswoman said the presidimt would sign it into law.
The bill approved Thursday
would send more than $127
million to NASA Glenn for
research projects ranging from
the development of the most
efficient aircraft engine to creating a nuclear power program
to power .~ysterns on future
Mars and outer planet missions.
Contaminated weapons sites
also got funding for cleanup
work. The Fernald site near
Cincinnati was on track to
receive $324 million, said Rep.
Rob Portman, a Cincinnati
Republican.
'
Funding for the clean up of
the Mound site in Miamisburg
and ongoing remediation work
at the Portsmouth Gaseous
Diffusion Plant in Piketon also
were included, but the amounts
were not immediately available.
The National Underground
Railroad Freedom Center in
Cincinnati, which is set to open
in 2004, would get $6 million
to pay for construction.
The bill included money for
dozens of transportation projects, such as $8.5 million for
statewide bus facilities, $4 million for a transit center in
Cincinnati and $1 million to
renovate the Lorain train depot,
according to Sen. Mike
DeWine, a Republican member
of
the
Senate
Appropriations Committee.
The Akron-Canton Regional
Airport was to receive $5 million to expand its terminal and
build a new exit off of
Interstate 77, said Rep. Ralph
Regula, a Navarre Republican
and member of the House
Appropriations Committee.
Regula also touted $3 million that's included in the bill

to extend the Cuyahoga Valley
Dozens of health care and
Scenic Railroad to Canton. education programs in Ohio
Cwrently, the service runs just were to receive funding,
25 miles from Independence to including more than $1 million
Akron.
A long list of housing and for the Rainbow Babies Center
veterans projects in Ohio also
were to get funding.
Rep. Dave Hobson, a
2FREinCIDS
Republican member of the
House
Appropriations
IPRIIIVIWY
Committee, touted $180,000 to
CIIIMI7
help renovate and expand the
Blue Star Mothers Memorial
FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'S CLASSIFIED
Stadium in Chillicothe and
SECTION AND WINI
$180,000 to help the Catholic
Social Services, located in his
hometown of Springfield,
rebuild their foodbank after a
fire destroyed their building.

...

•WIN• .

The Renaissance
Unit at Sank Hilts

a speciaU•ed,

sec:••mlll

· unit where highly
pror...ional
compasi!IJonate care

given to those who
raee Alzheimer's

Disease and related

HOLZER
·CLINIC

dementia.

Our goal is to help our residents
maintain their Independence
as tong as possible.
+Private Dining Room
Bright, open, airy "Florida Room"
+ Nutritious Meal

up," Vanessa Fuson, 16, said
of her testimony in 1996.
. Vanessa and her sisters te~llf1ed Thursday that thetr
mother's boyfriend had manufactured the lies and reinforced them with beatings.
Their mother si nce has
married the man.
.
Vanessa and her sister~ Amy, 17, and Melts sa
Bullock, 20 - have waged a
nearly two-year campai gn
for Fuson and Monk 's
release .
l

After county Children
Services workers removed
·their mother's boyfriend
.
.
from their home m 1998 they
felt safe enough to tell the
truth, the sisters testified.
Their mother agreed with
her boyfriend and turned the
girls over to the child-we ifare system.
Authonlles refused to take
them seriously about recanting their stories , they said .

A WIRED WORLD COMPANY

+ Prolesslomd

let us be
Valentine's Day

• Gift
Baskets
¥lingerie
Oils&amp;.. Lotions

2002 MF471, 2WD, 8x2 trana.,
dual remotes, wet brakes, less·
than 30 hrs., lull warranty,
5.9% ao tow ao $289 per month. '

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT,

Set, • ..-.,"'" dei'r " - '
MondBy- Sllturt/By 11Mm-8pm

Sp1ing Valley Plaza • Gallipolis

==4=41-16~1,!.1~~~=====

16" 1 TOJlpirt~

ZZA
8

9.99
675-1812

Point Pleasan~WV

713-552u
Mason , WV

frii!idaire
Stainless
Steel APPliances
Now In Stock!

MASON
FURNITURE
COMPANY
•Quality • Selectio11 • Service

304-773-5592
2nd Street

Mason, WV

Faith • Values

Evangelical author rejects popular
explanations for human suffering

1150 Eesttm Avt~nue
Gelllpolls, Ohio

446·9777 or 446·1484

Gallipolis
Chiropractic
Center
Dr. Joey D.
WeAre A

Full5enlce
Fadllty

Offedna;
• Diagnostic X-Rays
• Personal
L-----l
Rehabilitation
• Nutritional Counseling
• Personal Injury
• Workers Compensation
• Most Insurance Accepted

74G-441-0200
1·888·451-2225
990 2nd Ave. • Gallipolis

Friday, February 14, 2003

In Concert

BY RICHARD N. 0STUNG
Associated Press

It's often said that humanity
ponders only a few ultimate
questions: Does God exist?
Can we know him? Where did
we come from? Is there life
after death? Do our lives have
purpose? And, of course, this:
Why do people suffer?
In Bible-based cultures, the
question becomes: Why do
people suffer if God is good
yet also all-powerful and able
to prevent suffering?
The perennial question,
raised anew by the deaths of
the Columbia space shuttle
astronauts, sometimes seems
in
especially
pressing
America, where life is less
difficult economically and
medically than in most
nations during rriost centuries.
When suffering is less common, it is perhaps more likely
that people will ask, Why me?
Why, indeed? Struggling
with his child's fatal illness,
Rabbi Harold Kushner wrote
the best- selling "When Bad
Things Happen to Good
People," which scaled down
traditional concepts of God's
power to emphasize his goodness.
Evangelical
Protestant
"health and wealth" preachers
say believers need only pray
to God in true faith to receive
deliverance. Other evangelicals, rather like New Age
teachers. take the mind-overmatter approach: Christians
must simply maintain a
cheery; "victorious" outlook
no matter what.
Nancy Guthrie rejects these
popular explanations as she
ponders the human plight in
"Holding on to Hope: A
Pathway Through Suffering
to the Heart of God"
(Tyndale). She meditates on
the biblical Book of Job, that
monument of Jewish literature, which avoids snap
answers and affirms the
Creator's mysterious power
and purposes.
Guthrie's small, unpretentious book has provoked
intense reader responses. It
could be read in one sitting,
though many will digest it
more slowly.

Voices in Praise, a singing group from Kentucky Christian
College in Grayson, Ky. , will be in concert Sunday. Feb. 23
at Gallipolis Christian Church.

Voices in Praise
coming to Gallipolis:
Christian Church
Hope Guthrie, daughter of author Nancy Guthrie, is seen in this 1999 photo. (AP)
Guthrie, an evangelical
book publicist living in
Nashville, Tenn., gave birth in
1998 to dau~htet'Hope , who
was immediately diagnosed
with Zellweger syndrome,
which attacks a child's biochemistry and causes death
within months.
Against cruel odds, Nancy
and husband David both carried the rare recessive gene
that was passed on to Hope.
David then underwent a
vasectomy but again
against excruciating odds Nancy nonetheless became
pregnant with son Gabriel.
who also had Zellweger syndrorne and died in 2001,
months after his birth .
The book never mentions
that
the
conservative
Presbyterian couple never
considered aborting Gabriel.
For them, his life would be
God's gift, and God's will.
The Guthries feel American
Christianity is often illequipped to confront suffering. They did not feel called
to pray for healing because

Zellweger syndrome infuses
each cell of the body with toxins and there is no cure.
And they rejected the "victorious" attitude, grieving
deeply. "I can't say I'm
healed," Nancy admits. "Part
of my heart is no longer
mine." The two children took
it with them.
Nancy participates in a
Bible Study Fellowship group
that, by chance, was discussing Job just before
Hope's birth. She never realized how quickly she herself
would face Job-like tra~edy.
What to do? Worshtp, for
one thing, even when it's
hard. Guthrie sees worshipping God as a matter of obedience. "We worship because
God is worthy, not necessarily
because we feel like it." To do
only what you feel like doing
causes "a cycle of self-pity."
Also, realize that "everything we have is a gift" from
God and admit that everything belongs to God anyway,
she advises.
Though "the world tells us

to run away from suffering,"
·it's impossible to avoid,
Guthrie reasons. So the best
choice is to "enter that suffer- .
ing and look around for God
in the midst of it," especially
since the Bible teaches that
God suffers, too.
Even though she has no
explanations, she has faith
that God allows suffering for
a purpose. One of the purposes is to "take the pieces of
your life and transform them
into something beautiful, if
you invite him to do so."
At first Guthrie hesitated to
write anything, lest she
exploit her family's story. But
she .decided her thoughts
might help fellow believers,
not only those like her whose
children have died, but those
who have lost spouses,
friends, jobs, financial salvency, health or hope.
Note: Guthrie herself was
consoled by books, including
Gregory Floyd's "A Grief
Unveiled"
and
Philip
Yancey's "Disappointment
With God."

Friends reflect on life of radical
priest who disappeared 20 years ago

Nursing Center

Girls say they lied about rapes
MOUNT VERNON, Ohio
(AP) - Three sisters have
testified they lied in 1996
when they said they had been
rap ed repeatedly by their
father and his girlfriend.
They appeared Thursday
before the same Knox
Co unt y Common Pleas Court
judge who presided over the
tri als in which Howard
Fu so n and Denise Monk
were co n victed and sentenced to life in prison .
" It was a lie. It was made

for Child Health in Cleveland
and $921 ,000 to help the
Columbus Children's Hospital
continue working on new vac-'
cines.

The Daily Sentinel

Page A3

VVorld War II veteran, left
Nicaragua in July 1983.
Carney, 58, was not seen
again.
Honduran officials later presented Carney's family with
his ~riestly st?le, holy oils: a
chalice and Bible he'd earned
with him, but they never produced his body. They held a
news conference in September
1983 saying the insurgents had
been defeated.
Over two decades, Carney's
family has sought answers by
imploring help from members
of Congress, the CIA, federal
courts, and groups such as
Amnesty lnternatmnal. They
ended up with "20 feet of documents," including a 1998
CIA Inspector General's report
that has passages edited out,
Connolly said.
The declassified CIA report
said Carney was captured, tortured and dismembered by the
Honduran army and buried
near Nueva Palestina, a settlement on the fringe of the
Patuca jungle region . But
another account had him being
thrown from a helicopter.
Carney grew up in a traditional conservative Catholic
family in St. Louis, where he
attended Jesuit schools. After
serving in World War II, he
entered the semi nary and
became a Jesuit himself.
His politics changed soon
after he moved to the Central
American country - one of
the poorest in the Western
Hemisphere - upon ordination in 1961.
He did pastoral work but
also organized peasant unions,
cooperatives and efforts in
human rights and land reform.
His efforts got him expelled
from Honduras in 1979, said
his friend, the Rev. Joe
Mulligan, a fe llow Jesuit based
in Managua, Nicaragua.
arms.
"He came into contact with
The rebels and Carney, a

ST. LOUIS (AP) - The
Rev. James Carney, friends
say, was a maverick - a radical Roman Catholic ~riest
whose convictions led htm to
challenge injustice in his
adopted country of Honduras.
Twenty years after his disappearance and death, Honduran
officials said last week that
Carney's remains may have
been located in a common
grave in a jungle region of
their country
near the
Nicaraguan border.
Friends and family, who
believe he was "captured,
interrogated and eliminated,"
wait in hope that the possible
discovery could resolve the
uncertainty still surrounding
Carney's case.
"It's been a 20-year effort to
get to the truth," " said W.
Joseph Connolly of St. Louis,
husband of Carney's sister,
Eileen, who died in 2001. "It
doesn't die. It's like Jim and
Eileen are urging it on. It's not
just a case of Jim, but a case of
justice."
: Carney's autobiography, "To
be a Christian is ... To be a
Revoluti onary," to be published for the first time in
Honduras this year, describes
how he was radtcalized by seeing the struggle of the poor
Hondurans he served in the
1960s and '70s. In his view,
the needs of the nation's poor
majority weren't being met by
its rulers.
•
Those who knew the activist
priest long have suspected the
military-influenced Honduran
government then in power
ordered death squads to kill
Carney after he accompanied a
band of Honduran revolutionaries on a mission from
Nicaragua. Carney served as
the group's chaplain, though
he was opposed to bearing

oppression and human misery,
people struggling for survival," Mulligan said. "He was
very pastoral and close to the
people. He lived austerely."
After
hi s
expulsion,
Carney's Jesuit community
arranged for him to work in
neighboring Nicaragua. He
was pastor of a parish for a
year, then became associated
with a revolutionary group of
Hondurans in Nicaragua,
Mulligan said.
It was during this time, on a
spiritual retreat while visiting
St. Louis, that Carney decided
to be the rebels' chaplain. "It
was about his trust in God, and
by the end of it, he had decided," said fellow Jesuit, the

Rev. John Kavanaugh of St.
Louis, who directed Carney's
retreat.
Mulligan said Carney figured that if the armies of the
world can have a chaplain, "a
little army of the poor can have

one too."

JUNGLE BOOK 2 (G)
7:30 &amp; 9:30

They will perform at
10:35 a.m. and 6 p.m.
VIP presents a music style
ranging from contemporary
Christian worship and
gospel to Christian pop. All
youth groups of the area are
invited to attend. This concert includes an incredible
time of praise and worship
incorporating scripture ,
skits and audience participation.
VIP is an auditioned performing ensemble now in
their 14th year of music
ministry. The nine members
are from various locations
including Ohio, Indiana,
Pennsylvania, Kentucky and
Tennessee.
They·
are
enrolled at KCC in various
disciplines of study including Bible, preaching youth
and ministry, specialized
ministry, education, music
education, church music and
pre-law.
Using the different styles
of music they travel

throu ghout the summer
serving and performing at
church and church camps, as
well as eight weekends each
semester performing at
churches, private and public
schools, youth conven tions
and retreats.
The vocalists of VIP are
all
members
of
the
Kentucky Christian Coll ege
Concert Choir which tours
twice each year, has nine
recordings, one video and
has performed four times on
the stage of Carnage Hall in
New York City. VIP and
Concert Choir are· directed
by Mark Deakins, chairm an
of the department of music.
For more information. call
David Plumley, youth minister or Mike Lynn, senior
minister at the church office
(740) 446-1863 .

Hymn sing
scheduled
LONG BOTTOM - A
hymn sing will be held at 7
p.m . Friday at the Faith
Full Gospel Church, Long
Bottom . " Under the Son"
will sing.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPs 213-9&amp;o)
Ohio Va11ey Publishing Co .

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know ol an error in a
siOry, call1he newsroom a1 (740) 992·
2156.

Published
every
afternoon ,
Monday through Friday, 11 1 Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-

Our main number Is

Association.
Postmaster: Send address correc-

(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Laylon, Ext 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
ClassJCirc.• Judy Clark, Ext10

Circulation
District Mgr.: Mike Jenkins, Ext 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12

7 :30

23.

He left the Jesuits because
he didn 't wanl\o embroil them
in his undertakin g, but he
planned to rejoin hem later, Mulligan said. Then Carney
disappeared.
Said
Kavanaugh:
" He
believed you have to resist
people who have power and
money and military might."

Reader Services

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30PM MON-FRI &amp;
12:30 PM SAT· SUN

CENTENARY
Gallipolis Christian Church,
4486 Ohio 588 will host will
host Voices in Praise VIP,
nine
vocalists
from
Kentucky Christian College,
Grayson, Ky., Sunday, Feb.

E-mail:
news@ mydailysentinel.com
Web ~

www.mydailysentlnel.com

class postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper

tions to The Daily Senlinel , 111
Courl Street. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month ... ... ..... .'9.95
One year ..... ...... .'119.40
Dally . .............. . . .50"
Senior Citizen rates
One month .......• •• • .'8.95
On year •• •••. .. .. . .•.'96.70
Subscribers should remit in
advance di rect to The Daily
SentineL No subscription by mail
permitted in areas where home

carrier service is available.

Mall Subscription
tnslde Metgo County
13 Weeks ... ....... .. .' 30.15
26 Weeks . ..... . .. . .. '60.00
52 Weeks
.. ..' 118.80
Rates Outside Meigs County
13 Week s . . ......... . .' 50.05
26 Week s ......... . .'100.10
52 Weeks . . . .
. .... '200.20

All AGES , All TIMES $4.00

�Local News

· The Daily Sentinel

In concert

....

'
Vienna Choir Boys
coming to Nelsonville
The Vienna Choir Boys is a
nonprofit organization solely
supported through their 300
annual worldwide concerts
and CD sales. About I00
boys, age 10-14, are part of
the four touring choirs named
for composers connected with
the choir: Anion Bruckner,
Joseph Haydn, Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart and Franz
Schubert. It is the Haydnchor
touring the United Stales this
sprin!l and performing at
Hockmg College.
Dressed in their familiar
sailor suits, the Vienna Choir
Boys will perform works by
Brahms, Eybler, Gallus,

Community Calendar
Public meetings Clubs and
Organizations
Monday, Feb. 17
LETART - Letart Township
Trustees will meet at noon at
the office building.

.S aturday, Feb. 15
ATHENS -The Musical
Ensemble , "Destiny" of
Kentucky
Christian
. College will .be performing
. at 7 p.m. Saturday, and
. 8 :10 and 10:35 a.m.
Sunday at the Athens
Church of Christ, 788
West Union St., Athens.
There is no admission
·charge and child care will
be provided for all services .

Kropfrei ler,
di
Lasso,
Mendelssohn , , Mozart and
Schubert and the program
will also include a Gregorian
Chant. Their conductor is
Lucio Golino. Klaus Dieter
Jting provides piano accompaniment.
The $30 tickets include a
champagne reception at 6: 15
p.m . There are also $22 and
$ 15 ti ckets available in
advance with an additional $5
if paid at the door.
Tickets are available by
calling 800-282-4163 or 7533591 , Extension 211 2.

Wednesday, Feb. 19
MIDDLEPORT
The
Middleport Literary Club will
meet at 2 p.m. at the home of
Martha Hoover. Ida Diehl will
review the "Harry Potter"
books by J. K. Rowllng.

GALLIPOLIS
The
French Art Colony wi II be
holding its 2003 fund-raising
"Everything's
campaign,
German," from 6:30 TO 9:30
p.m. on March I. This nigKt
will provide German food ,
beverages and music combined with a silent auction and
raffle items.
Over 80 items are on the
silent auction block. A sneak
preview includes: two Ohio
State tickets and an Ohio State
Sweatshirt from Coach 's
Comer; two one-year family
memberships to the Lyne
Center at the University of Rio
Grande ; an Ohio Coin
Necklace from Oak Hill
Banks, a was h, wax and cleaning of the inside of the car or
va n from Gene Johnson
Chevrolet; a pizza/bowling
party for 10 at Skyline Lanes ;
a 14-karat gold necklace and
earring set from Acquisition
Jewelers; half-page advertisement from Gallipolis Daily
Tribune ; four symphony tickets from the Ariel Theatre: 12
buffets and drinks from
Golden Corral: "Dinner and a
Sitter" with baby-sitting services by Bob Hood along with
a nice dinner from the Down

Jeff Burger of Century Aluminum of Raveswood is pictured presenting a check to Mary Bea McCalla, program director for the
French Art Colony.
Under Restaurant. Along with
the silent auction items are
over 30 raftle items.
Tickets for this fun-filled
evening are $14 per person
and $25 per couple. They may
be purchased by caJiing the
FAC at 446-3834. The Ohio

Friday, Feb. 14
POMEROY Widow's
Fellowship, noon at Grow's
Family Restaurant.

Arts Counci I helped to fund
this organization with stale tax
dollars to encourage economic
growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment
for all Ohioans. ,
For more information, caJI
FAC at (740) 446-3834.

How to voice your complaint

Occasionally we all purchase an item that is unsatisfactory. What can be done to
resolve the problem? Many
times simply returning the
product to the store will take
Tuesday, Feb. 18
care of the situation. If that
POMEROY - A childhood doesn't work, a complaint leiimmunization clinic will be held ter should be written.
Address the typed letter to
from 9 to 11 a.m. and 1to 3 p.m.
the
appropriate person or the
at the Meigs County Health
office of consumer affairs.
Department. Children rrust be Identify the product (brand
accompanied by a parent or legal name, serial number, model
guardian and shot records are to number, etc.), state when and
be brought along. Donations are where the item was purchased,
appreciated but no one is denied explain the history of the problem, and what has been done
services ~ they can't contribute.
to try to correct it. Keep your
letter short and to the point. Be
polite. Tell what you would
like to have done. Do you
Loretta Beegle of Pomeroy want your money back? Do
you want the product
will observe her 94th birthday exchanged? Do you want the
on Feb. 17. Cards may be sent itern repaired?
to her c/o Rita Fisher, Box 180,
Send copies of all correHebron, Ohio 43025.
sponding documents: receipts,

Birthdays

Friday, February 14, 2003

Becky
Baer
Extension
contracts, guarantees, warranties, cancelled checks, etc.
Do NOT send the originals.
Keep them in case you need
them as proof of purchase in
the future.
Give a specific deadline for
the company to resolve the
problem. Add that if you aren't
satisfied within that time frame,
you will seek assistance from a
third party. Be certain to give
your name, address, phone
number or e-mail address so
you can be contacted. Send the
letter and documentation by
cenified mail with a returned

receipt requested. Keep a copy
of your letter.
u· you have to send another
letter, sel'ld a copy of the flfSt
one with it. Address this letter to
the president of the company. If
you do not get satisfaction at
this point, send copies of the letters and documentation to the
Better Business Bureau and the
state Consumer Protection
Agency. You may choose to
involve the court system into the
resolution of the problem.
An important thing to remember when Writing a letter of
complaint: keep copies of all letters - those you send and those
you receive. They will document the steps you have taken to
correct the problem. You may
need this proof if the matter is
not easily resolved.
(Becky Baer is Meigs County~
Extension agent for family and
consumer sciences/community
development, Ohio State
University.)

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

· Obituaries

MIDDLEPORT _ Harold
"Buddy" Thomas, 65, of
Middleport, died Wednesday,
. February 12, 2003, at his resi: dence, following an el\tended illness.
. He .was born August 5, 1937,
m Mtddleport, son of the late
Sanford and Stella Donahue
Thomas.
He retired after 43 years of
service as a maintenance supervisor at the Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation. He was a member··
of VFW Post No. 9926 of
Mao;on, West Vtrginia, and he
was a member of the Moose
Lodge No. 731.
He is survived by his wife,
Charlene Walburn Thomas of
Middleport; a son and daughterin-law, Timothy and Tammy
Thomas of Middlepon; a daughter and son-in-law, Teresa and
Dave Hubbard of Aiken, South
: Carolina; several grandchildren;
: sisters and brothers-in-law,
: Mary (Putchie) and Zol Maggid
• of Charleston, West Vtrginia,
and Polly and Milford Hysell of
Middlepon; a brother and sisterin-law, David and Diana
Thomas of Middleport; and sev. eral nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he
. was preceded in death by a sisHaskin s.
te .,• "'anda
n.
Services will be 6 p.m.
Sunday, February 16, 2003, at
Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport. Officiating will be
_ AI Hartson. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 3 to 6
p.m. Sunday, February 16, 2003.
At his request, cremation will
follow the service.
Memorial contributions may
be made to Holzer Hospice,
.. Meigs County Branch, 112 East
· Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Child
Thelma Lantz
TUPPERS PLAI NS Thelma Lantz, 67, of Tuppers
Plains, died Wednesday,
February 12, 2003, at
Camden-Clark
Memorial
Hospital in Parkersburg, West
Virginia.
She was bom April7, 1935,
in Long Run, West Virginia,
daughter of the late Woodrow
Wil son and Mary Clem
Putman.
Surviving are her husband,
Joe Lantz; two sons and
daughters-in-law, Danny and
Paula aDd Charles and Mary
Lantz, all of Coolville; a
daughter, Donna Reed of
Tuppers Plains; nine grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren ; five brothers
and sisters-in-law, Jim and
Ruth Putman, Don and
Marlene Putman, Junior and
Frances Putman, Burl and
Bonnie Putman , and Dale and
Becky Putman , all of
Coolville; and three sisters
and brothers-in-law, Edith
and John Henderson of
Portland, Dorothy and Mike
Lance of Tuppers Plains, and
Connie and Jerry Saylor of
Guysville.
Besides her parents, she
was preceded in death by a
brother,
Jackie
Eugene
Putman.
Services will be I p.m.
Sunday, February 16, 2003, at
White Funeral Home in
Coolville, with Pastor Teresa
Waldeck officiating. Burial
will follow at Stewart
Cemetery in Hockingport.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and
6 to 8 p.m. Saturday,
February 15, 2003 ~
Memorial
contributions
may be made to the American
Cancer Society.

·Deaths
•Jackie Riggs
. LETART, W.Va. -Jackie
B. Riggs, 64, Letart, died
Thursday, Feb. 13, 2003, at
. Pleasant Valley HospitaL
. He is survived by his wife,
Delores E. Riggs of Letart.
Services will be l p.m.

Sunday in Fogelsong-Tucker
Funeral
Home, Mason,
W.Va., with Pastor Mike
Finnicum, Pastor Brian May
and Pastor Troy Dudding officiating. Burial will follow at
Zerkle Cemetery, Letart .
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m.
Saturday.

For the Record
EMS runs

both of Racine; and Daniel J.
Marr Jr., 23, and Amanda
POMEROY
Meigs Marie Buckley, 20, both of
Emergency Services units Letart, W.Va.
: responded to the following
calls for assistance Thursday:
CENTRAL
I: 12 a.m., Sycamore Street,
CHESTER -Christina M.
Angel Carter, Pleasant Valley Mather, 29, 47940 Riebel
Hospital;
Road, Long Bottom, was
7:41 a.m., South Second
Avenue, Middleport, Mattie cited for failure to control by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Ball, treated;
· 5 ~10 p.m., Ohio Route 124, State Highway Patrol following a one-car accident
Dennis McPherson, treated.
Wednesday on Ohio Route
248.
Troopers said Mather was
in
Chester
POMEROY - Marriage eastbound
licenses have been issued by Township at 5:45 p.m. when
Meigs County Probate Judge she lost control of the car she
L Scott Powell to Stefon G. drove in a curve. slid off the
Bolin, 41 , and Vickie Lynn right side of the road, struck a
Vaught, 44, both of Albany ; ditch and rolled over.
The car had disabling \liimJeffrey Lee Kauff, 35, and
Renee Marie Laudermilt, 30, age, troopers said.

Driver cited

To: The World's Best
randma and Great Grandma
We will always love you.

From Lynn, Leslie,

Christina and Bradly
Colburn
We love you guys.
From Mom and Cramer

RJ and Keaton

To My Baby
Happy Valentine's Day
Deborah
Love, Tim

Bob:
You fill my heart
and brighten my
days with love.
Love ya, Betty

Happy Valentine's Day!
To: Keith, Allie and
McKenzie
I love you all very muchl
Love, Julia/Mom

Happy Valentine 's Day
Leanne
I Lpve You
Shawn

Issued licenses

Snuggle Bug
Be tough we can handle
anything . I love you with all
my heart.
YourET

~t!,.t!'......

To: My Snuggle Bunny,
Times are tough things might
get rough bur with my Jove, i
will he enough to get us thm.
LOPe you a/wan,

""""' 'fM&lt; a.e u. _, ~«?iu
~- e-~

LYIIII

.L,-

Joe

s- d-119' 'fM&lt; ""1M

Happy Valentine 's Day

~l#U4.

/love you so much.
Thanks for being such a
great husband.
Love Janie

~~, 1/af«fiM 6

Z'4t

Valentine Day
To six wonderful children
Don, Bonnie, Faith, Tim,
1l1mmy and Ted.
Thanks fo r being such a
' great family also, inlaws,
grandchildren &amp; great
grandchildren. ·
We are proud of you.
We love vou
Mum &amp; Dad

The Daily Sentinel• Page A5

.

Harold 'Buddy'
Thomas

Other events

Monday, Feb. 17
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County Right to Life, 7:30 at
the Middleport Church of
Christ.

·Concerts, Shows

Friday, February 14, 2003

French Art
Colony
fund-raiser
March 1

'

NELSONVILLE - The
famed Vienna Choir Boys are
coming to Southeastern Ohio.
The choir will perform at 7
p.m. Wednesday, March 12, at
the Hocking College Student
Center in Nelsonville.
Founded in 1498 to sing
Mass every day, the Vienna
Choir Boys present a churchlike quality in their music.
And, while church music can
come off as stuffy and choir
music pretentious, the boys
have· fun with their music and
their glowing energy rubs off
· on their audience, said Judy
Sinnott, public information
ofticer.

PageA4

Snow
from Page A1
adds up, creating overtime
for these workers.
Hysell estimated there was
at least $]00 more spent in
wa~es during the last pay
penod.
.
If the weather does not let
up, the village will have to

dip into the general fund to
pay for any shortfalls created
m the street and sewer fund
budget. Hysell said the village would "have to watch
expenses" the rest of the year.
But Hysell said she is optimistic about the winter
weather.
"We are not going to have
any more snow I hope," she
said about the worst winter
she has seen in years. "I hope
it is going to warm up."

J.

BY BRIAN

rest~aint
.
•

REED

Staff writer
POMEROY - Parents are
becoming more aware of the
importance of child safety
seals, but state and local
agencies are starting to
.emphasize the importance of
proper use and placement of
car seats to ensure the best
protection.
As part of National Child
Passenger Safety Week,
which continues through
Saturday,
Gallia-Meigs
Community Action A~ency
has promoted its participation in "Ohio Buckles
Buckeyes," a program sponby
the
Ohio
sored
Department of Health and the
OhiO Department of Pub Iic
Safety.
Community Action has
received a number of safety
seats for distribution to
income-eligible parents.

usage gets local boost

.

National statistics indicate
that use of car seats is on the
rise, but that as many as 83
percent of child safety
re straints are improperly
used, and four in five children
are
improperly
restrained.
"Non-crash injuries can be
severe or even fatal, and are
most common among unrestrained
children,"
Community Action 's Teresa
Varian said. "Older :children
face the same dangers, as
well as ejection when unrestrained, or restrained in
improperly-fitting adult seat
belts."
Varian said safety agencies
recommend ear-facing infant
seats, ~laced in the back seat
from brrth to at least one year
and 40 pounds, forward-facing toddler seats, in the back
seat, from age one to four and
20 to 40 pounds, booster
seats in the back seat from
age 4 and 40 pounds to at

Teresa Varian , Meigs County coordinator of the Ohio Buckles
Buckeyes program, and Trooper Jim Hannon of the Gal lia·
Meigs Post of the Ohio State Highway Patrol demon strate
proper restraint methods for Michael Fetty, 4. Child Passenger
Safety Week continues through Saturday. (Brian J. Reed) ·

least 8, and seat belts for all times," Varian said .
older children.
Varian, who serves as the
"All children under 12 county coordinator for Ohio
should ride in the back seat at Buckles Buckeyes, said

J1ead Start pushes healthy living to kids
BY J. MILES LAYTON
Staff writer

POMEROY - The heart is a wonderful thing to behold .
As part of the Head Start program,
Laura Horsley teaches students the difference between a "love" heart and a
"living"- heart.
Heart of the Valley Head Start is a
federally-funded program preparing
children for kindergarten by teaching
them to read and do all sorts of things.
Lori Hatfield, head teacher at Head
Start, said students are well-prepared
for the next level of learning.
"Head Start gives children a head
start in life," she said.
As the cardiovascular coordinator for
the Meigs County Health Department,
Horsley wants children to appreciate the

heart's function , especially around
Valentine's Day.
With a book in hand, Horsley reads a
couple of stories to children sitting and
paymg the kind of attention usually
given to Barney the dinosaur. Storytime
teaches these 4- and 5-year-old students
how to read, how to think.
"I think they understand the difference in a picture heart versus a real
heart," Horsley said.
The sociaJ worker, who has spent
many hours with children, said she gets
a special feeling when she reads to
young minds.
"I like teaching," she said. "It is nice
to work with people ' we' call friends.
There is a saying that 'you make my
heart grow big.' Well, these kids make
my 'heart grow big' today."
Horsley will read to four classes and
teach more than 68 students at Head

Start.
Students and staff learn the value of
exercise and a good diet. Each year,
more than 250,000 deaths are attributed
to lack of physical activity. In stilling
lifelong lessons early about what the
heart is all about is what Horsley is all
about.
Horsley's lessons are not just for children. She will be carrying her "Active
For Life" program to the streets.
Adults at many area businesses and
schools will participate in a program
which will teach lessons of healthy living. The kick-off for this I0 week beat
the street program begins at Southern
High School Feb. 19.
·
If a healthy lifestyle is not reward
enough, prizes will be given away
throughout the I0 week program 10
motivate participants and reward activity.

Court News
Meigs County
Court
POMEROY - The following cases were concluded in Meigs County Court:
Robert Forester, Racin·e,
Seatbelt, $20 and costs;
Pamela Furr, Ravenswood,
Speeding, $30 and costs;
Gary L. Harker, Belpre,
Seatbelt, $30 and costs;
Edward Gibbs, Racine,
Seatbelt, $30 and fines;
'.Terry
Gilkey,
Letart,
Speedin~, $30 and costs;
Levi Gtllette, Richmond,
KY, Speeding, $30 and
costs; Stephen C. Grueser,
Shade, Seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Frame! Hendrix,
Syracuse, Seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Paul Hicks, Mason,
Speeding, $30 and costs;
Donald Holub, Philadelphia,
PA, $30 and costs; Traci
Houdashelt, Racine, Traffic
Cont Dev/Signs, $20 and
costs; William Howard,
Baltimore, MD, Speeding,
$50 and costs; Chfton R.
Jenkins, Kitts Hill, OH,

Speeding, $35 and costs;
Matthew
A.
Justice,
Rutland,
Display
plates/Valid Sticker, $20 and
costs; Kristina M. Kaniecki,
Pomeroy, Traffic Cont
Dev/Signs, $10 and costs,
Speeding, $30 and costs;
Jonathan R. Kent, Falls
Creek, PA, Speeding, $30
and costs, Seatbelt, $30 and
costs;
Marjorie
A.
Lawrence,
Morgantown,
W.Va., Speeding, $45 and
costs;
Juan
Lawson,
Proctorville, Speeding, $25
and costs; J.M . Lechiara,
Stowe, OH, Speeding, $30
and costs; Lee R. Lawrence,
Shade, Failure to Control,
$20 , and costs; James M.
Lerch,
Vienna, W.Va.,
Speeding, $25 and costs;
Raymond
C.
Lieving,
Bidwell, Speeding, $30 and
costs; John D. Lisle,
Syracuse, Speeding, $30 and
costs;
Elizabeth
E.
Mattingly, Wilmington, OH,
Speeding, $30 and costs;
William Maynard, Racine,
Seatbelt, $25 and costs;
McCoy,
Shaun
N.

Huntington ,
W.Va.,
Speeding, $50 and costs,
Seatbelt, $30 and costs; Jack
E;
Morris,
Pomeroy,
Speeding, $30 and cosis;
Corey M. Morsbach, Bethel,
Tinted Glass, $20 and costs;
David Nichols, Otway,
Seatbelt, $30 and costs;
Russell
L.
Nichols,
Parkersburg, Seatbelt, $20
and costs; Jacob D. Nolan,
Conneaut, Speeding, $30
and costs; Norma J.
Ragland,
Gallipolis,
Improper Passing, $20 and
costs;
Shawn
Rollins,
Reedsville, Speeding, $50
and costs; Nick Savage,
Monessen, PA , Speeding,
$45 and costs; Justin W.
Scribner, Albany, Traffic
Cont Dev/Signs, $20 and
costs; Kathy M. Shaffer,
Reedsville, Speeding, $30
and costs; Jamie D.
Shoemaker, Willow Wood,
Speeding, $18 and costs;
Stephen
L.
Shouldis,
Ravenswood, Seatbelt, $30
and costs; David P. Smith,
Lancaster, Speeding, $30
and costs; Elizabeth J.

Local Briefs
Community meeting
planned
SYRACUSE - A community
meeting to discuss the Floodplain
Management Program will be held
at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Syracuse
Village Hall.
Chris Thoms, an environmental
specialist with the agency, will be
there to answer questions about the
program. Mayor Bill Roush encouraged residents who need information to attend.

Set hearing
POMEROY - A hearing will be
held at 9 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 19
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to determine status of the

Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
District Board and to make necessary appointments as may be needed.

Board meets
. TUPPERS PLAINS -Eastern
Local School Board will meet at
6:30p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 19 in the
library conference room.

Extend conferences
TUPPERS PLAI NS - Parentteacher conferences have been
extended to 4 to 7 p.m. Thursday,
Feb. 27 in the Eastern Local School
District.
Parents should call their respective school buildings to schedule
appointments.

Read about
Southern and
Eastern~ girls and
their &amp;'arts to win
·sectional
basketball titles,
Page B1

Happy

Happy

Happy Valentine's
Day Cal)' G.
You rock my
world/
/love you very
much.

Petunia
i

Valenline 's Day

Steve (Dog)
"Love shows in so many ways
thal those who love always sec
it.. .
~

''

It speaks in so man y voice' that
those who love always hear it...
It is for so many re aso n ~ thai
those who love never as k why...

Love

Michelle

Dear Debbie KingBirthday wishes especially
for you I
On your Valentine Birthday and
everyday you are wished a
loving heart that is always filled ·
with ';oy and happiness I
'
Happy, Happy B1rlhday Niecel
With Love
Aunt Shirley Miller

Happy Valentine's Day
Grandma and Grandpa
Chapman , Grandma and
Grandpa Hill , Grandma Betty,
Cricket. Mom, Dean. Jayme,
Autu mn, Travis. Andee, and
my love Scotty, and all ol my
wonderful family.
Thanks for everything.
I love Uguys
Janey

,,

Smith, Rutland, Speeding,
$30 and costs: Paul J.
Stephens,
Murraysville,
W.Va., Seatbelt, $30 and
costs; James R. Taylor,
Rutland, Speeding, $30 and
costs; Don B. Tillis,
Rutland, Speeding, $50 and
costs; Catherine L. Tillman,
Gallipolis,
Failure
to
Control, $20 and costs;
Shawn W. Ullom, Paducah,
KY, Speeding, $50 and
costs; Jason C. Unger,
Chesapeake, VA., Speeding,
$30 and costs; Harold E.
Vance, Baltimore, OH,
Speeding, $30 and costs;
Craig L. Watkins, Medina,
Speeding, $30 and costs;
Ronnie Wells, Tuppers
Plains, Disorderly Conduct,
$85 and costs; Jonathan P.
Whaley, Fayetteville, NC,
Speeding, $30 and costs;
Melissa
D.
White,
Gallipolis, Speeding, $30
and costs; Lesa A. Withers,
Athens, Speeding, $30 and
costs; Rodney E. Wooten,
Racine, Seatbelt, $3 0 and
costs. Failure to register, $20
and costs.

'THINK SPRING SALE"

High Price of Nitrogen got you worried?

• Sulpher Coated Urea ..............................................$114.75/ton Bulk Only
• Meadow King 17-17-17-35 .................................... $170.75/ton Bulk Only
• Atrazine 4L ........................................................................$9.00 gal (2x2.5)
• Twine*x'!!~!~.~~'l ............... 9,000 $14.85/bale ................... 16,000 $17.25/bale
' While Supplies Last

Let our licensed Agronomist
&amp; Nutritionalist work for

l150fo OFF ALL PRIEFERT EQUIPMENT IN STOCK
2003

I

�I -

• •

PageA6

1n1on

The Daily Sentinel

· Friday, February 14, 2003

River Valley
Apostol ic Worship Center
S73 S. 3rd AYe ., Middleport
Kc,·in Konkle. Pastor
SundBy. 10 a. m. and 6:00p.m.
Vednc sUay, 7:30 p.m.; Youth Fri . 7:30p.m.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Managing Epitor

Editor

www.mydallyaentlnel.com
-161 Mulbmy Ave., Pomeroy. 992-S89B
Putor: Rev. Walter E. Heiru

. bst'lllhl~

of ( ;ud

Liberty Assembly ol God
P.O. Box 467 , Dudding Lane

Sun. Mw - 9:30a.m.

Dailey Ma,.. - 8:30 Lm.

P-roy Cburdl of Clutlt
212W. Main St.

,

•

Pharmaceutical pricing here,
abroad our ages greatest mystery
• Las Cruces (N.M.) Sun-News, on the pharmaceutical
. industrv: When it comes to complexity of pricing, pharmaceu ticals are a good match for gasoline. Or, here's another
example of something being wrong in the pill industry.
Canadian pharmacists have been warned by major drug
manufacturers to stop selling drugs to Americans at prices 20
to 80 percent _lower than in the United States.
Now, GlaxoSmithKiine says if they don't stop, the manufacturer will cut off their supplies of its drugs. It is a major
source of medicine for asthma, depression and AIDS. It
claims improper temperature, humidity and radiation levels
during shipping could make the drugs unsafe.
It is true that drugs requiring specific controls can be damaged liy mishandling. But it also appears many people who
need these drugs cannot afford U.S. prices. Thus, they go to
Canada or buy them over the Internet. One province on the
U.S./Canadian border estimates its pharmacists sell $400 million worth of drugs to Americans, double what it sells to
Canadians.
Rather than ugly threats, we would like to know why the
very same drugs in the very same packaging can be sold for
so much less in Mexico and Canada than the United States.
Canada does have a national health plan that controls prices.
Even so. why do 100 Zocor pills cost $137 in Canada and
$372 in the United States? It can't be all temperature control.
It's about like trying to find out how the price of gasoline is
established.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

-

· : fodtly is Friday, Feb. 14, the 45th day of 2003. There are
320 days left in the year. This is Valentine's Day.
Today 's Highlight in History:
One hundred years ago, on Feb. 14, I 903, the Department
of Commerce and Labor was established. (It was div1ded into
separate departments of Commerce and Labor in 1913.)
On this date :
In 1778, the American ship "Ranger" carried the recently
adopted Star and Stripes to a foreign port for the ftrst time as
it arrived in France.
In 1859, Oregon was admitted to the Union as the 33rd
state.
In 1899, Congress approved, and President McKinley
signed, legislation authorizing states to· use voting machines
for federal elections.
In 1912, Arizona became the 48th state of the Union.
In 1920, the League of Women Voters was founded in
Chicago; its first president was Maude Wood Park.
In 1929, the "St. Valentine's Day Massacre" took place in a
Chicago garage as seven rivals of AI Capone's gang were
gunned down.
In 1945, Peru , Paraguay, Chile and Ecuador joined the
United Nations.
In 1962, first lady Jacqueline Kennedy conducted a televised tour of the White House.
In 1979, Adolph Dubs, the U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan,
was kidnapped in Kabul by Muslim extremists and killed in a
shootou t het ween his abductors and police.
In 1989, Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini called on Muslims to
kill Salman Rushdie, author of "The Satanic Verses," a novel
condemned as blasphemous.
Ten years ago: The body of James Bulger, a 2-year-old boy
who had been lured away from his mother in a Bootie,
England, shopping mall two days earlier, was found along a
stretch of railroad track. (Two boys who were lO years old at
the time, Robert Thompson and Jon Venables, were later convicted of murdering James; they spent eight years in detention
before being paroled.)
Five years ago: Authorities officially ,declared Eric Rudolph
a suspect in the bombing of a Birmingham, Ala., abortion clmtc and otlered a $ 100,000 reward, Russia's llya Kulik won the
men 's figure skating gold medal at the Nagano Olympics.
One year ago: Launching his defense against war crimes
charges, former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic justified hi s ac tions as a "struggle against terrorism" and said he
wa' a victim of twisted facts and "terrible fabrication." Enron
executive Sherron Watkins told a House subcommittee it was
cpmmon knowledge at the company that partnerships were
used improperly to hide debt and inflate profits. The House
vutcd to ban unregulated contributions to national political
partt es.
· Today's Birthdays: TV personality Hugh Downs is 82.
Actress-singer Florence Henderson is 69. Country singer
Razzy Batley ts 64. Ja~ mustctan Maceo Parker is 60. Movie
director Alan Parker ts 59. Journalist Carl Bern stein is 59.
Actor-dancer,Gregory Hines is 57. Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N. H.)
ts 56. TV personality Pat O'Brien is 55. Magician Teller (Penn
alld Teller) is 55. Cajun singer-musician Michael Doucet
(fleausoleil) is 52. Actor Ken Wahl is 46. Actress Meg Tilly is
4.J. Smger-producer Dwayne Wiggins is 42. Actor Enrico
Colantoni is 40. Actor Zach Galligan is 39. Rock musician
Ricky Wolking (The Nixons) is 37. Tennis player Manuela
Maleeva is 36. Rock musician Kevin Baldes (Lit) is 31. Rock
,jnger Roh Thomas (Matchbox Twenty ) is 31 .
Thought for Today : "A lady of 47 who has been married 27
years and has six children knows what love really is and once
descri bed it for me like this: 'Love is what you've been .
through wtth somebody. '" - James Thurber. American
humorist ( 1894- 1961 ).

PERKINS' VIEW

Democratic leadership is plilying politics with Iraq
Tom Daschle and Nancy Pelosi weren't
terribly impressed with the case President
Bush made in his State of the Union
address for forcibly turning Saddam
Hussein out of power.
"Before we commit the ftrst life, the first
American soldier in Iraq," said Daschle, the
Senate minority leader, "we need to have
more positive proof' that Saddarn is seeking or developing weapons of mass
destruction.
Bush "did not make a convincing case,"
COLUMNIST
said Pelosi, the House minority leader, "that
the use of force now is the only way to disarm Iraq, or that removing Saddarn from
For if Bush turns Saddarn out of power,
power would guarantee that a new regime as he turned the Taliban out of power in
would not pursue the same policies."
Af~hanistan, he will rise even higher in the
Of course, it really didn't matter what estunation of the American people.
Bush had to say about regime change in
He not only would be a near shoo-in for
Baghdad. The two Democratic leaders a second term in the Oval Office, he almost
were determined to oppose the Republican certainly would have the same coattails he
in the White House.
evidenced during last November's midNot because they believe · Saddam is term election, when he stumped for
harmless.
Republican congressional candidates
Daschle acknowledges that the Iraqi die- around the country.
tator is "a dangerous man who has done
That's why Daschle and Pelosi and their
batbaric things." Pelosi concedes that the fellow Democrats want to separate Bush
Butcher of Baghdad is "a menace."
from Iraq. That's why they want to prevent
Not because they do ·not believe that the president from taking action against
SaddAm is bent on acquiring or developing Saddam.
·
weapons of mass destruction.
So they raise all sorts of qualms.
"We know that Saddam Hussein is comThe United Nations inspection team has
mitted to one day J??SSessing nuclear not found a smoking gun to justify military
weapons," Daschle sa1d last fall. "If that action against Iraq. It has not discovered
should happen," he added, "instead of weapons of ma~s destruction. We should
threatening only his neighbors, he Would give Saddam more time to peacefully disbecome a grave threat to U.S. security and arm. We should not move against Baghdad
to global security."
unless and until the U.N. Security Council
So why, th~n. are the _two ~tic ·t:Ollfers·its blessings.
leaders breaking ~ With the pres1dent,
But why does the United States need a
questmrung the w1sdom of "using 'the'full ·· so-called smoking gun to take pre-emptive
force and might of the U.S. military," as action against Saddam? U.N . weapons
Bush rece~tly vowed, to oust Saddam's inspector Hans Blix issued a sufficiently
outlaw regune?
damning indictment against the regime in
Because the party of Daschle and Pelosi Baghdad just last week. .
has calculated that its best hope of regaining
"Iraq appears not to have come to a genthe congressional seats it lost this past uine acceptance," said Bli.x, "not even
November, of returning the White House to today, of the disarmament which was
Democratic hands in 2004, is to drive down demanded of it and which it needs to carry
Bush's popularity.
out to win the confidence of the world and
And they fear nothing more, politically, to live in peace."
than the prospect that Bush will wage a sueAnd, of course, Blix and his fellow
cessful war against Saddarn; that he will be inspectors have found no secret stockpiles
given credit for liberating the suffering peo- of chemical, biological or nuclear
pies of Iraq against the man whom Daschle weapons.
referred to as a "rnunlerous diCtator."
"From intelligence sources," Bush

Joseph
Perkins

infonned, in his State of the Union address,
"we know that thousands of Iraqi security
personnel are at work hiding documents
and materials from the U.N . inspectors,
sanitizing inspection sites and monitoring
the inspectors."
Indeed, Saddarn has been engaged the
108 U.N. weapons inspectors in "a scavenger hunt for hidden materials," said
Bush, "across a country the size of
California."
·
. So why should the United States give
Saddarn any more time to peacefully dis.
arm ?.
He promised to do so 12 years ago, at the
conclusion of the Persian Gulf War, and he
reneged. And even though he was put on
notice three months ago by the United
Nations that he must disarm or else, he
continues not to cooperate.
And, yes, there are certain member
nations of the Security Council that would
continue inspections indefmitely, that are
loath to condone war against Saddam like our squishy French and German allies.
None of those nations suffered the carnage
the United States did on Sept. II, 2001.
And none of them is likelier than the
United States to be the tar~et of the world's
first terror attack involvmg weapons of
mass destruction. A chemical, bioloilical or
nuclear weapon that the terrorists will have
acquired from a genocidal maniac like
Saddarn.
.
''The threat posed bX Saddarn Hussein
may not be imminent, ' Daschle said last
fall. "But it is real.lt is growing. And it cannot be ignored."
"If the president of the United States
makes a decision to place our young people in harm's way," said Pelosi, "because it
ts his judgment that we ~ave to do that to
protect the American people, I know that
we will all be 100 percent behind the president."
How quickly the Senate and House
Democratic leaders repudiated the words
they unered a mere maner of months, even
weeks ago. They may claim that their turnabout came after much soul searching, but
it really is nothing more than shameless
partisan politics.
(Joseph Perkins is a columnist for T11e
San Diego Union-Tribune mtd carl be
reached
ar

JosepiLPerlans@ UnionTrib.com. )

Love and honor
I admit there may be something perverse about lumping these two new bOoks
together- "Honor Lost: Love and Death
in Modem-Day Jordan" (Atria Books), a
serious and important memoir bearing
witness to the repression of women in the
Muslim world, and "Cad: Confessions of
a Toxic Bachelor" (HyPt:rion}, an unserious memoir bearing w1tness to ilie hedonism of the Western world - or, at least,
of a certain subculture of Manhanan.
The two books were on adjacent tables
at a bookstore, but close enough te trigger
a double take. Both titles relate to moral
codes (or lack thereof): With unblinking
purpose, "Honor Lost" refers to the cult of
female chastity that drives Muslim men to
murder family women for any "impurity,"
real or imagined. With a reflexively ironic wink, "Cad" refers to one man's rather, one guy's - halting pursuit of love
through uninterru pted promiscuity.
Interestingly enough, both book jackets
feature cropped photos of eyes: a
woman's resolute stare on "Honor Lost,"
and a young man's faintly smoldering (he
hopes) gaze on "Cad." Atier that, of
course, you've got to dig for a connection,
because what two worlds could be farther
apart than Amman, Jordan, a women's
prison according to author Norma Khouri,
and New York City, the libertine lovefest
that author Rick Marin describes'!
Marin is a pal of mine from way back
so alii wiH say about the haplessly relent:
less - or ts that relentlessly hapless?wotila(lizing he recounts followin~ his
divorc~from "Elisabeth" is that tt's a
relief when he finally finds a love true
enough to bring his littl6 black book of a
memoir to a conclusion. Meanwhile, it is
his unshrinking, unstinting and wholly
unembarrassed depiction of himself as a
"cad" that is notable. If hyper-promiscuity
is the convention in this milieu (and that's
the ca~e if this book is truly non-fictional).

Diana
West
COLUMNIST
then a "cad" - who, by quaint definition,
is "a man or boy whose behavior is not
gentlemanly" - isn't busting up any
social norms. Maybe the social embrace
of the non-gentleman is significant for
what it suggests about the expectations
Western women have for Western men,
and vtce versa.
The answer is not much. Sex is the currency of dating, and dating is cheap. As
"Cad" tells it, gals streak in and out of the
author's life, never breaking their free fall
for more than a varying stint of sexual eymnastics and, maybe. a little non-marital mtimacy. It's hedonism out of control - literally. In the West. where liberty is all, our
codes of honor, from chivalric to Boy
Scout, are mainly self-imposed; they get no
institutional muscle from church or state.
When an individual loses his moral compass, it's up to him to fiwl it again- or not.
Such freedom doesn't exi st in the
Muslim world, where the mosque and the
state control even the most intimate
details of people's lives - particularly
women's hvcs. This domination causes
Khouri ·lo label Islam "a totalitarian
regime operating under the guise of a religion." And totalitaritlnisrri is the nightmarish subtext that comes to life in
"Honor Lost," Khouri 's terrifying and

Hope Bapti!ll Cburth (Southern)
S70 Grant St. , Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Dav id Bryan
Sunday sc hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m. ttnd 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.
Rutland First Baptist Churtb
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
.B
Worship· 10:4."i a.m.
l'omtroy Flrsl B11ptilt
Pastor I on Brockert
East Main St.
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Flrsl Southern Baptist
4 l 872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Qryant
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wors hip · 8: 15a.m., 9 :4~ am &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.
Fir111 Baptlat Churdt
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6lh and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunda)· School · 9:1.5 a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wt=dnesday Service- 7:00 p.m.

Mlddleporl Cbureh ofChrlol
Sthand Main
Pu&lt;oc AI H11111011
Youth Minister: Bil1 Frazier

Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunda)· School · 9:30 a.m.

Worship - 10:40 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00 p.m.

inspiring account of the murder of her best
friend, Dalia, and Khouri's own efforts, in
Western exile, to avenge the murder and
others like it. Dalia was murdered by her ·
own father. The man stabbed his daughter
12 times, calling an ambulance only when
he knew she was dead. Why? He believed
Dalia had been seeing a man.
•
In fact, the dead woman had been seeing a man. The young Muslim woman
was going to marry him --once the couple
could flee the country. Michael was a
Catholic, and lherefore forbidden to
marry Dalia by Islamic law. Such
"immoral behavior" - along with other
"immoral" behaviors such as being a victim of rape, incest or unfounded rumor incites the murder of thousands of
Muslim women like Dalia every year by
their male relatives. Khouri vividly
describes the unbearable tension that
exists between women in Muslim societies and their menfolk, who may one day
become their murderers.
Not that such crimes are considered
"murder" at all. Jordan, like other Muslim
countries upholding this heinous practice
(and even Muslim communities in Great
Britain, Denmark and Sweden), deems
them "honor crimes" or "honor killings."
They are misdemeanors. (Indeed, as
Khouri writes, failing to buckle a seat belt
while driving in Jordan incurs a stiffer
penalty than honor-killing a family
female.) Dalia's killer served no jail time.
"I've cleansed my house," he announced
on that horrific day as Khouri raced into
his house to find her friend. Tve cut the
rotten part and brought honor back to my
family name."
Honor: Pity the cad who doesn't have
any use for it; punish the killer who doesn't know the meaning of the word.
(Diana West is a cohmmisr for Tile
Washington Times. She can be contacted
via dianaww@arrglobal.net. )

Keno Clilurdl ot Clilrtac

Sunday wonbip • 10:30 a.m. &amp;: 1 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service • 7 p.m.

Serv i ce~·

Evenins · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem Baptist Churtb
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pllstor : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study· 6:00p.m.

Worship ~

10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

P!De Grove Bible HoU- Church

tn mile off Rt. 32S
PasiOr: Rev. O' Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Thppon Pial• Cburcb ttl Chrlol
lnsii\IJMfltal
Worship Service • 9 a.m.

Communioa ~ 10 Lm.
Sunday Schoo1-10:15 a.m.
Youth· ~:30 pm Sunday

Bndbu17 Church ofChrlll
Minister: Tom Runyon
39SS8 Bradbury Rood, Middlepon
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

H,..U Rua Hoi,_ Churcb

Wonttip • 10:30 a.m.

Rulland Church ofCllrlol
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worstlip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Brldford Church of Chrlol
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Brldltury Rd
Minisler: Doua Shomblln
Youth Minister. BHI Ambera:er
Sunday Scbool· 9:30 Lm.
Worship · 8:00 a.m., 10:30 •.m.• 7:00p.m.
Wednetdtly Semce• - 7:00 p.m.

Wonhip - 10 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wednelday Services • 7 p.m.

Hllldda Bopdst Church
St. Rt. 143 jult otT Rt. 7
Putor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Uniflod Service
Wonhlp ~ 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.

Sl. Joha Lallie._ Qurcll

Wedn~ada)'

Services -7 p.m.

Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Wonhlp • II a.m.

lntcnect.ion 7 and 124 W

(

' llri~li . ltl

l t1io11

Hortford Churdt ttl Cllrlolla

Founh &amp; Main St, Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craia. Jr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.

Putor:DIVid Greer
Sundly School · 9:30a.m..

Ravenswood, WV

( 'a11wli r

Salem Ctnltr
Pastor: William K. Marshall
Sunday School· 10: I~ a.m.

Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Wonhip- 9:1S Lm.
Bible Study: Mooday 7:00 pm

Faldt hU Goopd Chun:b
Lon&amp; Bottom

-.....

Pllltor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. IU1d 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Friday · fellowship service 7 p.m.

,

The Belevers' Fellowabip Minish')'

Wonhip- 9 •.m.

\ll'llwdi~l

lllnfonl. W,Va.
MI. Olive Volttd Melbodlll
OtT 124 behind WilkesviUe
Pattor: Rev. Ralph Spirci
Sunday School - 9:30 •.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services -7 p.m.

( h11rrh nl • ,nd
ML- Churdl of God

Melp

CbesW'

Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship · 9a.m.

s~ Flnl Clturch ttl God
Apple and Secood Stl.
Putor. Rev. David R\WCII

Joppa
Putor: Bob Randolph
Wonhip • 9:30 1.m.
SuMay School - I0:30a.m.

Sunday Sc..,., and Wonhip- 10 Lm.
Evenin&amp; Servioet· 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Servka. 6:30p.m.

Sy......,MIIoloo
14118ridaeman St., Syra(:use
Rev. Mike Thompaon,Pastor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenlna · 6 p.m.
Wednelday Service • 7 p.m.

Oft'Rt. 124
Putor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.; 7:30p.m.

lly•rille C0111111unlly Church

Worship - 9 • .m.
TUetday Services · 7 p.m.

LoqlletiGm

Sunday Scbool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - I0:30a.m.
Roednllle

.•
Full Gospel Churt:h of lhe Living Savior
Rt.338, Antiqui ty
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Sel'\'ices: Saturday 2:00 p.m.

Hobson Christl•n Fellowship Church.
Pstor: Herschel While:
Sunday School· 10 am
Sunday Church service . 6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm

Restoration Chrl.'itian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Athens
Pastor: Lonnie Coats
Sunday Worship 10:00 am
Wednt!sday: 7 pm
Langsville Christian Church
Full Gospd
Pastor. Rober! Musser
Sunday SdllXJI 9:30am,
Worship 10:30 am-7:00pm
Wednesday Ser\'ice 7:00pm

l'l'llll'rt Jstal
Pentecostal Msembly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: Will iam Hoback
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
E~eninJ· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rvict.s - 7 p.m.

SyracUJt Flnl United Prnbyterl•n
Pastor: Robert Crow
Worship. II a.m.
.,

Harritonvtlle Presbyterian Church . '
Pastor: Robert Crow
Worship · 9 a.m. ·

Middleport Prtsbyterian
Pastor: Rober Crow.
Worship . 10 a.m.

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

Townllhip Rd., 468C
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
WedneDy Services • 10 a.m.

Mont Chapel Church
Sunday school · I0 a.m.
Worship · II a. m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Hocld..,..n Church

Falllt Gottpol Char&lt;b
Lons Bouom

G111nd Street
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II •.m.
Wcdnclday Services- 8 p.m.

:O.t' ll'lllh - llal \tht·uti'l
Sevrnlh•DI)''Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd .. Pomcmy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

ML OUve CoiiUIIunlty Churth
Putor: Lawrence Bush

Throb Churdl
Co. R&lt;l6J
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening· 6:30p.m.
Wedneday Service • 7 p.m.

.

Full Gottpel LlghlhoUJe
33043 Hiland Road. Pomeroy
Pastor: Ruy Hunter
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Thesday &amp; Thursday· 7:30p.m.

Mkldleport Cburcb ol the Naaarme
Pastor: Allen Mldcap
Sunday Sc~· '' ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:3U ~t.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Putor: Allen Midtap

South Bethel Communhy Church
Silver Ridge - Pastor Linda Damewood
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship Service: 10 a.m.
C.ritton IDterdenomtnadollll Church
Kina;sbury Road
Pastor: Robcn Vance
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship Se rvice I0:30a.m
Evening Se-rvice 6 p.m.

IIHdaYille Felloonblp
Chun:b of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck

Sunday School · 10 Lm.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Wcdnelday Service• • 7 p.m.

Bailey Run Road
Pas10r: Rev. Emmen Rawson
Sunday E~enina 7 p.m.
Thuradly Service • 7 p.m.

'\ :1/:tl'l'lll'

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Sunday Worship· I 0 a.m., 6 p.m.

Fallb v.u&lt;, 1ibenuoclo Cburdl

Sunday Scbool- 10 a.m.

c_..u•• Parllh

Alfred
Pastor: Jane Beattie

Rulland Clturcb of God
Putor: Ron Hath

Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evenin.!l ·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Rldoo
Putor: Brian H!Utneu
Sunday Scbool- 10 a.m.
WonhJp • 11 a.m.
WedneJday7p.m.

NOftheut Cluster

Mile HID Rd., Racine
Pastor: Jamca Sllterfidd
Sunday Sdtool· 9:43 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

Wedneaday • 7 p.m

Mlddleporl Coounuolty Chun:b
S7l Pearl St.. Middleport

Belbll Church

Gnhom Vnlttd Me-..
Worship - 9:30a.m. (lsi &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnell:by Service~ • 7:00p.m.

Harriaenville Conununlty Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30. a.m. and 7 p.m.

Coolville O.un::h
Main&amp;: fifth St

Sunday School · 9:4~ a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

l 11ih'd

New Lime Rd., Rutlllfld
Pa!!tor: Rr:v. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
SUilday, 2:30p.m.

MomtnaSIIIr
Pastor. Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· 11 a.m.
Worship • 10 Lm.

New Llr~ Vh:lory Center
3'773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis. 01-1
Pastor: Bill Slaten
Sunday Services· 10 a.m. &amp; 7 P-Ill .
Wednesday- 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Salem Community Church
Lieving Road, West Columbia, W.Va.
Pastor: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday School 9:30 tam
Sunday evening serv ice ·6 pm
Wednesday service 7 pm

Abundant Grace R.F.l.
923 S. Thlrd Sl., Middleport
Pastor Teresa Davis

Coolrille Vnlttd Melbodlll Porlab
Puror: Helen Kline

SL Paul Lulberoo Cburcb
Comer Sycamore .t Second SL, Pomeroy

Sunday Bible Study· 9:30un.
WorBhip: 10:30 a.m. llltl6:30 p.m.
w.dneoday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

173-501 7
Service time:: Sunday I0:30a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Evan1eUst: Dennll Saraem

Mt. Moriah Baplbl

Pastor: Da~ id W. McClain
Sunday S~:bool lO an1·
Moming worship II am, Evening • 7 pm
Wednesday 1 p.m.

Rock Sprlnp
Plulor: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 9:1.5 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowlhlp, Sunday · 6 p.m.

Huel Community Cllurr:h

Norman WW, auperinlendent
Sunday wonhip • 10:30 o.m.

ChrWianValoa

Second Baptist Chun:b

w.v•.

Paalor: David RuueU

Forat Run Bapdsl

Rutland Free Will Baptbt
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

OurSaYiourLudteroaChurdl
Walnut and Henry Sta.. Ravenswood,

Sunday ~ehool9:30·a.m .

Chorcb ttl Chrlot

Faith Bapdsl Church
Rallrottd St., Mason

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School · 9:30 1\,m,
Worship · 10:4S a.m.
Sunday Evening · 6:00p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas

Wonhip • 9:00a.m.
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.

Sunday Sohool: 9:30a.m.

Wonltip- IOa.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Wor5hip . II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

PineOrove

Churdl ofChrlol

Datlr Cburdl IIIChrlol
PuWr. Billl!aholmon

Sunday School· 9:31J a.m.
Morning Worship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 pm
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.
Youth Service- 7:00 p.m.
Appe Ure Ceater
..Full-Gospel Church"
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second A~e . Mason

llu!Letort
Paotor: Brian Huttneu
Sunday School· IOLm.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
WedneJday-7p.m.

Putor: Philip Sturm

Wonhlp Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednelday, 6&lt;JO p.m.

VIctory Baptist lndepeodent
Sll N. 2nd St. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keeaec

Ash St., Middl!!port · Pastor: Glenn Rowe

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4.5 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

l .tJliH •J,JII

Rejoicing Lire Chun:h
500 N. Znd Ave. Middlcpon
Pas1or: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawr~m:e Foreman
Worship-- 10:00 i1 m
Wednesday Se rvice~. 7 p.m.

Won:hip - 7 p.m.

l'omeroT

1'lle Church or IOOUI
Cbrt.t ttl Latte .. o., S.U.g

Thursday Sen"iccs -7:00

Community Church

Pustor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Services · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
ll1Ursday · 7:00p.m.

Clifton Tabernacle Chun:h

Worship: 6 pm

Putot: Rod Brower
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunda.y School- 10:3.5 a.m.

Racine, Ohio
Pu&amp;or. Dtwayne Stutler

Homcmakina mectlna. tat Thun .• 7 p.m.

Bible Church
l'omcroy l-'1ke. Cu. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday S::hool - Q : ~O tl.lll
Worship 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wedne~da)' Se ni ~·e · 7:.\0 p.m.

Wednesda)· Ser\'ice • 7 p.m

I alln-ll:11 "iainh

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Even ina • 7:00p.m.

C ~th• •ry

Ash Street Churtb

Carmei·Sutton
Cannel &amp; IIIBhon Rd&amp;.

28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport

Faith Fellowship Crusadt' ror Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Di t: ke11:.
SerYice Frid&lt;~y. 7 p m

Cli fton, W.Va.
Sunday School · I 0 a.m

Wednesday Services • 10 a.m.

Old Belhol r,.. WIU Bapdst c•urcb

hlrvlew Bible Church
Lctan . W.Va . Rt. 1
P&lt;~s t or Hrian May
Sunday School · 9 : ~0 a.m
Worship · 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00 p.m.

Youth &amp;:roup 6 pm
Wedrlesday: Power in Pra)·er
and Bible Study • 7 pm

E~ening

Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 •.m. and 6 p.m.
Wedneoday Service - 7:00p.m.

Sunday SchooJIO:l0-11 a.m.
RttieiSocieOy/Prieotllood II :OS-12:00

&lt;1 . 111 .

. 7 p.nt.

Peorl Chapel

Lau..t aurrm Melbodlot Church

SL Rt. 160,446-6247 or446-7486

Wo rs hip · 10:.\0

Chesler School
Pastor. Rob BaJber
Assistant Pastor. Karen Davis
Sunday Worship: 10 am

Pasklr. Dcwaync Stuller
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

noon
Sacrament Service 9-10: I~ a.m.

-

Bethel Wonhlp Center

Sunday Scbool - 10 Lm.
Worship - 9 1.m.

lllcllorr lljUo Cburdt of Chrlol

Cha~J)t' l Weslcya~n

Coolville fto:ld
Pastor: Kc\'. Phi llip Ridl!nour
Sunday School . !1:30 a.m.

Mlaemtlle
Putor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wot1hlp - 10 a.m.

Rev. Mad: Michael
Sunday School- 9 :30 a.m.
Wonihip- 10:4.5 a.m., 7 p.m.
l"humday Bible Study and Youth • 7 p.m.

Rev. Lcs Strlr!dt and Myra L. Strandt

Whitfj's

Stivernill~

Ponland-Racine Rd .
Pastor: Michael Duhl
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WoNhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Rullmtl

Wale)'IUI Bible Holl- Church
75 Pearl St., Middlepon.
Pastor: Rev. Doua; Cox
Sunday Worship - 9:30p.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Bible Study Wodneltday 7 pm

Evanplbt Mike Moore
Sundily School - 9 Lm.

ofSiuo"'n H.U- Cburdl

Pas&amp;or. Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Sunday Scllool - 9:30 Lm.

Communll)' or Chrbl

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

Leadin&amp; Creek Rd., Rutland

l.loa Church ttl Chrlol
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RL143)
Putor: Roger Watsoo

7:00p.m.

Mt. Union Bt~~ptbt
Pastor : David Wiseman
Sunday School-9:4.5 a.m.

Harrisonville Road
Paalor: Charles McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodne~y Service - 7:00p.m.
-

( llhl'r ( ' hurrhl'~

Wonhip - ll :OOa.m.

Calvoey PIJvba Chopol

Sunday Schoot-9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m•• 6:30p.m.
Wednelday Services -6:30p.m.

Poriland Flnt Church of lhe Naurene
Pastor: William Justis
SW'Iday School -10:00 a.m.
Morning Wof'llhi(l · 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Service - 6:30 p.m.

Heodt (Mldllleportl
Pastor. Rob 8rowff
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

Sunda.y school - 9:30 a.m. ,

llarwallow llldp Church of Cbrtol
Pastor:Bruce Terry

Slh. er Rua Baptist
Pa.stor: John Swauson
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Worship • I l a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wedne\day

Doa.tlk- Cburcb

Sunday Scbool-10:30 a.m.
Paotor-Jelliq Wallace
Ill and 3rd Sunday

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p. m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Forest Rua

310S7 Slate Route 32S, LlnJsvUe
Pastor: Gary Jackson

Wonhip ·9:30a.m.

Rutlaad Church of tht Nata~n~
Pastor: Rev. Louis S. Staubs

Pastor: Bob Robin1011
Sunday School • 10 Lm.
Wonhip . 9 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m·.
Worship- 8: 1.5, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scnic:es. 7 p.m.

Racine First Baptist

: Ariu:i HW1
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

lost,Jound and murdered

Community Churtb
Pastor: Steve Tomek
Main Strttt, Rutland
Sunday Worshlp-10:00 a.m .
Sunday Servlce-7 p.m.

Services· 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Pa~tor

WEST'S VIEW

llolim·s~

Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - IOa.m., 6 p.m.
We-dnesday SCO"ices • 7 p.m.

Baptist

NATIONAL VIEW

Sunday School !tlld
Holy Eucharistli:OOa.m.

Pomeroy Weslllde Church of Cbrtsl
33226 Children's Home Rd.

Re-v. Helkrt G111te
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wor~hip · I l a.m., 6 p.m.
WedneMiay Services· 7 p.m.

Eaterpdlt
Pastor. Arland Kin&amp;
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:30
F'lalwoocll
Putor: Keith Rader
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Worship- 7 p m

Wedne ~ a y Scn'i ~:c

P~H~tor :

Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School · 9 : 4~ a.m.
Worship - 11 •.m.
Wednesday Sc.rvices · 7:30p.m.

326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Hemack.i, Rev. Kalharin Fostcr

Pomeroy Chul"(:h of tht- N•urme
Pastor: Jan LaYender
Sunday School- 9:30 tt.m .
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and (l p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Chetter Chun:h of tbe Nazarene

Cattn!Ciumr

G....., Ephoopol Church

Minister: Anthony Morris
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

lllppen PloiM SL Poul
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday 5:'=hool - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

TUesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Jack Noble
Worship 10: 2~ a.m.
Sunday School 9: I~ a.m.

Minister: Lury Brown
Worship· 9:30 •.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study • 7 p.m.

Pustor: Neil Tennant

Pinl SWiday of Monlh -7:00p.m. service

TriDIIY Cburch
Second &amp;. Lynn, Pomeroy

Hemloek Gn¥tChrillloD Churdt

The Dally Sentinel• Page A7

Worahip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

( o11gn·gal ion a I

( ·hu n ·h ol ( It ri~l

Mason, W.Va .
Sunda~

Pucor: P.l. ~"'
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - J I a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sat. Con. 4:4S-.5:1.5p.m.: Mus- ~ : 30 p.m.
Sun. Coo. -8:4.5-9:1.5 a.m.,

Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rd off New lima Rd. Rutland
Service~: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30p.m.
Thurs. 7:00p.m.
Pastor Murty R. Huuon

Den Dickerson
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

fdlo\1 ship\ po~toli r
Churtb of Jesus Chrisl Apoatolh:
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pustor: James Miller
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Evening. 7:30p.m.

The Daily Sentinel

Bette Pearce

Friday, February 14, 2003

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip. 10:4.5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Sy~ c•urn ollk NUiftDt

Pastor Mike Adkins
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Saturday Sef"\licl."~ :
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
WX'Sh ' ' 3

.

I nill'd Brdhrl'n
Mt. Hermon United Brethren
in Christ CbuJTh
Texas Communit y 304 l I Wickh am Rd
Pas10r: R0bcn Sunders
Sunday School · 9:30 tt .m.
Worship · 10: ~0 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Ser\'h:cs ·7:00p.m.

Eden United Brethren In Christ
State Route 12-l. R ~cdsv ill c
Pastot: Re v. Bil l Duty
Sunday Sehoul • II a.m.
Sunday Worship · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:f){) p.m.
Wednesday Se rvice~ · 7:00p. m.
Wednesday Youth Se n ·icc · 7:I Xl p.m.

Freedom G01pel Ml.nlon
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd. 31

Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
· 9:30a.m.

White Funeral Home Crow's Family Restaurant
.:t~brr .:tunml .,otnt
.................
3'
l.
"F•turlng Kentucky Fried
Since 1858
Chicken"
9 Fifth Street
MIIIMMI
228
W.
Main
St.,
Pl'lnrtArlllvl
Coolville, Ohio
992-5432
740-667-311 0
•m•tu
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
U"I:Uji\V FLOWER SHOP I Blessed are the pure
PHARMACY
in heart; for they
106 BU1TERNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
POMffiROY,OR 992-6454
shall see God.
Prescriptions
"Flowers for all occasions'
Matthew 5:8
992·2955
Pomeroy

----·· .....
-a-.•.,.

Office Service &amp;Supply
137..C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport. OH
Bill Quickel

992-6677

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

Acts 24:16

992-6376
Meigs County's Oiliest rtonsl
East Main

Pomeroy, Oh
•t..t Ul cthd yGYt tftov&amp;htt with_,,.,-,_,

740-992·2844

'

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES ~
214 E. Main
992·5130

..

Pomeroy

"ut your light so shine befoi'Y!
men, that they may see your
good works and glorify your

Father in Heaven."
Matthew 5:16

?u-•u4t

ilnouUtt'l
;lire &amp; 6afnp

~uu

174 Layne Street
New Haven, WV 25265
H. Andel!lon 304-.882·1!2~
o;recror Fax:

1'0. . . . . . .

tIll 1114111

CJ--- -·M"

...

•

J

CCI

My grace Is sufficient for
thee; for my strength Is
made perfect In
weakness
11 Cor. 12:9

�Page AB • The Daily Sentinel

Friday February 14, 2003

www.myqailysentinel .com

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:
College ba11ketball roundup, Page 82
Scoreboard, Page 83
Jeter a hot top.l c, Page 84

Page Bl
Friday, February 14, 2003

Prep basketball

Eastern drops Beaver
Eastern to win sectional

Sebastian .Kaiser. foreip exchange
student at Meigs High School~ designed
this logo in the graphic design class.
Art teacher Matt Kinnard designed the
Marauder last year.

BY ScoTT WOLFE
Sports correspondent

MIIGS
Marketing Eductlfion
&amp;DECA

McARTHUR - A Jess
Hupp free throw with 28 seconds left gave the Reedsville
Eastern Eagles a one point
lead that led to their 5 I -50
Division
IV
Southeast
Sectional Championship victory over the Beaver Eastern
Eagles Thursday night at
Vinton County High School.
Eastern ( 14-7) advances to
the district tournament at
Wellston where they play 2 I0 South Webster at 6:15 p.m.
on Thursday, Feb. 20.
Eastern was led by Jen
Hayman, who carried the
Eagles early with 16 points
and eight rebounds, while
Katie Robertson added 14
points and I2 rebounds for a
double-double. Alyssa Holter
notched seven points with
another great floor game and
some good defensive stops,
while Krista White added
four, Morgan Weber six
points, Jess Hupp three, and
Jess Dillon one.
Beaver Eastern (12-8) was
led by Rebecca Day's 24
points and II rebounds for a

the Marketlnc Education
Program consists of hllo classes
and coop work experience.
Activities Include participation
In DECA and assisting In the
development of the Meigs
County VIsitor's Guide.

MeigsDECA
proudly servinc Meigs County.

double-double. Jesse Osborne
added nine, Jessica Howard
nine, Kristen Roberts five,
Jessica Edilell two, and
Stephanie Michael one.
"This is a great win for us,"
,said Eastern mentor Rick
Edwards. "Thi s was a big
come from behind win for us,
we finally got things iloing
the way we like to play m the
fourth, our press started
working and we were able to
get the ball in down low and
score against their zone.
"I give a tremendous
amount of credit to Beaver for
the way they played," he
added. "We were really not
very focused to start the game
and even through three quarters we hadn't sensed the need
for urgency. Finally in the
fourth quarter we had some
players step up and gain their
focus and play well for us.
"Our free throw shooting
could easily have cost us the
game," added Edwards. "We
were 4-for-1 0 from the line
with several of those coming
very late in the game."
A foul shot by Hupp won
the game, but as Edwards
indicated free throw shooting
could have sealed the game

much earlier for the Eagles.
Overall, Eastern was 12-24
for the game for just 50 percent and was 1-for-5 ooing
down the stretch in the founh
quaner.
Eastern had a six point
lead, 50-44, late in the fourth
at the I: 15 mark. After a
missed Reedsville Eastern
free throw, Eastern didn't get
back into its defense and
Osborne nailed a three pointer to cut the lead to 50-47 .
Said
Edwards,
"We
watched them hit an uncontested three by Osborne, then
turn around and foul the
shooter on the next play."
Eastern had two missed free
throws on the double bonus
and Beaver Eastern grabbed
the. rebound. Rebecca Day
grabbed the outlet pass from

Please see Eastern, 83

Posting a come-from-behind win over the Beaver Eastern Eagles, the Reedsville Eagles posted
a dramatic 51-50 Sectional Championship victory last night at Vinton County High School. Front
row, left to right, Krista White, Casey Smith, Jenny Armes, and Jess Hupp. Back row, from left,
assistant coach Jared Stewart, Katie Robertson, Alyssa Holter, Krystal Baker, Jen Hayman.
head coach Rick Edwards, Hallie Brooks, csoach Cathy Edwards, Morgan Weber, Jessica Dillon,
coach Dave Weber.
. ,:'1,.1,

Staiem.ni Of Foell: Our enflre
THIS PUBLIC SALE WILL BE
. , CONDUCTED AT THE . :· .

: " ''Ao'o~l:"sSE$' LimD BErOW., •·

of nome brand tumtture and bcH:Idlng Is
being offered atllquldallon p~ces. Quality
brands thol you know and hull! lhlo will not
be a tong, dragged out alfalr; and whon lllo
Over It will not be repealed.

FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY AND

Southern
High School

Meigs
High School

Eastern

.High School
~~

'.~;

r•

Southern senior Brlgette Barnes cuts down the net Thursday
at Vinton County High School as Southern claimed Its second
straight sectional championship, defeating Miller 45-29.

Southern tops Miller
for sectional crown
Correspondent report

The Nursing Assistant program is a one-year program offered to students in their senior year of high
school. The program consists of one period of related instruction during the morning and four periods
of simulated laboratory experience in the afternoon. Beginning second semester. students participate in
on-the-job cooperative employment at a local health care or hospital facility during the afternoon or
evening hours. Students will be certified in CPR and First Aid. Interested students may also enroll in
the Emergency Medical Technician class offered through our Meigs County EMS.

For More Information Call Your Guidance OHice
Meigs High School992-2158 • Southern High School949-2611 • Eastern High School '985-3329
'

McARTHUR -· Bolstered
by a tenacious defensive
stand and 29-point second
half, the Southern Lady
Tornadoes broke a 16-16
halftime deadlock and went
on to claim a 45-29
Championship
Sectional
victory over the Miller
Falcons Thursday night at
Vinton County High School.
Southern (16-5) now
advances to the District
Tournament to play White
Oak (14- 7) next Saturday
afternoon at I p.m. at
Wellston High School.
Miller bows out of tournament play at 3- I 8. The win
was Southern 's second
straight sectional championship.
Southern was led by
senior Amy Lee who was 9for-9 from the foul line with
a game-high I 3 points.
Deana Pullins added seven,
Brigette Barnes six, Katie
Sayre five , Rachel Chapman
four, Brooke Ki ser four,

Jessica Hill three, Ashley
Dunn two, and. Joanne
Pickens one. Others seeing
action and doing a fine job
were Tara Pickens, Susan
Brauer, and Ashley Roush.
Miller was led by Sam
Brillon with eight points,
Lora Spencer four, Jenna
Murphy three, Emile Bray
three, Kelsi Brown three,
and two each form Emily
Winnenberg, Siera Toth,
Mandy Spencer, and Ashley
Hinkle.
"We played great overall
said
defense tonight,"
Southern
Coach
Scou
Wolfe. "I don 't think we
gave up an undefended shot
from the paint all night long.
But our offense, especially
our first half offense was
absolutely pitiful. We handled the basketball the first
half like it was a hot coal.
We'd touch it and wing it,
and usually it resulted in a
turnover."
Southern commiued 22
turnovers the first half, but

.,.

'

SPC. Bedroom. Queen or Full
Includes: bed, dresser, mirror
rhest and night stood. Not
54399.00
NOW ONLY SITU
,ONLY 6TO SELLI 24' ook bar Detorotor wing chon. Boll and OAK ICE BOX occosionol tables.
sloOis perle!! for your snack bar claw legs or Queen Anne designer Use lor side table; lamp table
or end table. NOT $249
Not 5199.00
fabric. Not $398.99
EXTRA PRICE CUT $77
First In tabs them $88 eo. FINAl LIQUIDATION $237
Mission style ook entertoinALL ITEMS
ASK ABOUT SPEOAL
ment renter. Leaded ~ass
SUBJECT TO
DISCOUNTS ON
doors. HURRY NOT $~98.00
PRIOR SALE
THIS IS m$333
SCRATCH AND DENT
AND.ONE OF A lUND
Queen size Easy Rest 111111tress
set. Umited quonHiiesi.Not
S399.99 FINAL
LIQUIDATION $199

THE END
IS NEAR!
42' round cherry table with 4
spindle bock choir~. Out they
go. Hot $999.88 YOUR
lAST CHAIKE $444

Pine Cedar rhesl by world
famous Lanai Country style
design. Hot 5649.98
· LIQUIDATION $299

6 MONTHS
SAME AS CASH
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
WJ.C.
OAK 3 PC. Dineffe set.
·'i PC 8ohoflex sedionol '
lnduded drop leal table and 2 'Trad'tlionol styling. Sleek bad
~de choi~ Hot $348. 9B
fobrk.llot 1198.99
PRKf S$87 .
NOW ONLY S199

THESE ARE JUST A
FEW EXAMPLES

HUNDREDS AND HUNDREDS OF MARKDOWNS
3piiKe sectional by Simmons. BERKUHE Rorker·rer5ne~.
Includes double riKiiner ond Traditional siYiing. Hunter
~eeper. Not $2498.98
green mirro fiber. Not
FINAl UQUIDATION
5598.00 FINAl PRKING
PRICE $1299
NOW $2911
Firm Full ~~• rnoffms and
LEA1HER solo, thoir and
boxsprings set. Dut they go, ottoman ONE ONLY! G£T ALL 3
while they last. Hoi $299.88 FDR ONE PRICU01 $2648.98
FINAL $149
FINAL $13U for AU. 31

Please see Southern, 82

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

s

•Di11iina R00111s •Wan
•Recbners
•Dinettes •EtaPres
•IA!mps •Piduras
•Entertainment Centers
•Motio• Sofas
·•Mattresses •Ouaslonol
Tables •Sleepers •Mort

BLOW OUT ON IWIN Sill:
TRESS Sffi. rwm support,

Comfort Qudted Not 5249
FINAl LIQUIDATION S119

�F

Page B2 • The

Daily Sentinel

----~------------~
' ~~-·~

College basketball

Southern
from Page 81

Wake Forest's Justin Gray, center, is surrounded by Duke players Daniel Ewing, right, and Sean
Dockery, left, in the first half at Lawrence Joel Coliseum Thursday in Winston-Salem, N.C. (AP)

Wake Forest works OT to end
14-game skid against Duke
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.
(AP) - The long wait is over
for Wake Forest.
Justin Gray, back from a
broken jaw, scored 18 points
as the 15th-ranked Demon
Deacons snapped a 14-game
h&gt;sing streak to No. 8 Duke
with a 94-80 victory in double
overtime Thursday night.
It was Wake Forest's first
win over its state rival since
January 1997 - when Tim
Duncan was a senior.
" It's one thing to tell them,
'Hey listen, it's Duke, a Hall
of Fame coach, terrific, terrific players, but they don' t
dress in a phone booth.
They're not Superman,"'
c.oach Skip Prosser said.
"B ut until you beat them,
it's really just coach speak.
Our guys were determined
that if we were going down
we were going down swinging."
The Demon Deacons dido' t
go down at all. After wasting
chances to win at the end of
regulation and the first overtime, they outscored Duke 206 in the second extra session
- sending a throng of celebrating students onto the
court when the buzzer sounded.
"You could just see the
emotion through the fans and
the players," Gray said. "This
is one of the best games I've
ever played in."
In other games involving
ranked teams, it was No. I
Ari zona 106, UCLA 70; No.
22 Cali fomia 63, Washington
State 53; No. 24 Stanford 78 ,
Washington 69: and No. 25
Saint Joseph's 78, Temple 59.
Vytas Danelius scored 20
points and matched a career
high with 14 rebounds for
Wake Forest (17-3, 7-2 ACC) ,
which is a half-game ahead of

No . . 16 Maryland for firstplace in the conference.
The Blue Devils (16-4, 6-4)
shot 31.5 percent and have
four ACC losses in a season
for the first time since going
12-4 in 1997. They had on! y
four assists.
"When you don't hit shots
you don't get assists," coach
Mike Krzyzewski said. "We
missed 50 shots."
Gray returned to the lineup
for the first time since breaking his jaw at Duke on Jan. II
when he ran into Dahntay
Jones' pick. The freshman
guard wore a mask to help
protect his face and finished
6-for-11 from the field and 4of-5 from the line before fouling out in the first overtime.
Eight players fouled out in a
game that saw 64 fouls called.
Trent Strickland scored I 0
points in the second OT,
while Jamaal Levy added 15
points and 13 rebounds. Star
forward Josh Howard had 10
points for Wake Forest before
fouling out in the second half.
"Right now I'm so happy I
don't know what to do,"
Howard said. "I can remember this game now. We won."
Chris Duhon led Duke with
a career-high 23 points, but he
missed his first six shots of
the second overtime:

Arizona 106
UCLA 70
At Tucson, Ariz., Freshman
Andre lguodala scored a
career-high 18 points to lead
five Arizona players in double
figures.
Arizona(19-2,Il - l Pac-10)
buried the Bruins with a 21-0 .
run late in the first half and
early in the second.
UCLA (5-15, 2-9) has lost

nine consecutive Pac-1 0
games and I 0 of II overall.
No. 22 California 63 ,
Washington St. 53
At Berkeley, Calif., Joe
Shipp scored 20 points and
Brian Wethers added 16 as
California scored the final
nine points to earn its 16th
straight home victory.
Arnit Tamir had 14 points
as the Golden Bears (17 -4,
10-2 Pac-10), off to their best
start since 1960, won for the
II th time in 13 games. The
Cougars (5-16, 0-12) have
lost eight straight in Berkeley.

Stanford 78
Washington 69
·At Stanford, Calif., Julius
Barnes scored 21 of his 29
points in the second half to
lead the Cardinal.
Rob Little added 12 points
for Stanford (18-6, 9-3 Pac10), which beat Washington
for the I Oth straight time at
home.
Doug Wrenn scored 23
points to lead the Huskies (813, 3-9), who fell to 1-7 on
the road and lost for the fifth
time in six games overall.

St. Joseph's 78
Temple 59
At Philadelphia, Delonte
West had a career-high 32
points and Pat Carroll scored
all of his career-best 24 on 3pointers,
leading
Saint
Joseph's over crosstown rival
Temple at the Palestra.
The Hawks (18-3 , 8-2
Atlantic 10) have won four in
a row, and swept the season
series for just the third time in
20 years. Alex Wesby had 20
points for Temple (7- 13, 5-5).

reduced that mark to nine
in the second half for 31
overall. Ironically, Miller
had 29 turnovers in what
became an ugly first half,
and
35 for the game .
Together both clubs had 64
turnovers on the night.
"It wasn't pretty, but generally the first game in the
tournament is the toughest
because of the jitters,"
Wolfe said. "Miller had a
game under their belts on
this floor, and had some
momentum coming into the
game with their upset of
Green on Monday. I am
very proud of the girls for
responding the second half.
Once again it took every
player to pull this game
out. The girls have worked
very hard and now have
two crowns this season to
show for their hard work.
We hope to go a step farther than we did last year.
The girls believe and that
can take you a long way in
the tournament."
Both clubs started poorly
amid the turnovers, but
Southern, behind a full
court press started to find
some rhythm and turned
several Miller turnovers in
to steals and lay-ins. Lee,
Chapman, and Barnes were
the beneficiaries, then
Deana Pullins drained. a
three pointer to give
Southern an 11-4 lead.
Turnovers again turned
Southern possessions into
Miller
opportunities,
allowing Mandy Spencer to
knock down a lay-up off
the press to end the frame
11-6.
As Southern struggled to
run an offense in the second period, becoming even

more impatient than in the
first quarter and as a result
did not make a field goal.
The Tornadoes, however,
went 5-for-7 at the line.
Meanwhile, Miller scored
four transition buckets off
the break or against the
Southern
press.
Lora
Spencer led the way with
four points as the teams
went into the half tied 1616.
"Despite having a bad
first half, our girls regained
composure at the half,"
said Wolfe. "I told them at
halftime, ''there is not one
thing I can tell you that you
don't already know. There
fs no hurry and we have 16
minutes of basketball left.
If we are going to win we
have to run the offense and
pass it as many times as it
takes until we get the open
shot."
The strategy must have
worked as Southern came
out and worked both sides
of the court until Rachel
Chapman broke to the
block and turned a Brigette
Barnes pass into a score.
After forcing a Miller travel, SHS again ran the
offense to perfection, this
time with Lee sliding off a
Dunn screen and scoring
on a lay-in from the block
for four quick Tornado
points, 20-16.
The next two possessions
added to the suspense as
both teams exchanged a
series of four turnovers as
anxiety built amid the tensions in the crowd. Amid a
physical possession under
the bucket in which
Southern had four shot
attempts hammered away
by
the Falcons, the
Southern bench got its first
technical of the year. Emily
Winnenberg hit one of the
free throws and Sam
Britton hit on the posses-

sion to make it a one-point
game. 20-19 .
Southern
sophomore ·
Brooke Ki ser hit a pair of
free throw s on the next
possess ion and after a .
Tornado stop of Miller.
Southern ran a stack play
from the side! in e. Chapman
hit Dunn for an uncontested lay-in and Southern
never trailed again. The _
Lady Tornadoes responded
with an 11-5 scoring offset .
fueled by a Pullins steal
and lay-in to lead 27-21
after three rounds.
Kiser had a great game
off the bench and despite ,
her five foot, three inch ·
frame had seven rebounds
and key bucket early in the
final round. Tara Pickens
also had a couple key ·
rebounds when the game ·
was on the line.
Two straight Katie Sayre ·
buckets early in the final
round helped give Southern
some breathing room and a .
8-9 foul shooting spree ·
going down the stretch pre- .
served the lead . Jessica '.
Hill and Joanne Pickens ·
came off the bench to score
as SHS rolled to the 45-29
championship win .
Southern hit 12-of-35 ·:
and according to the charts ·
missed a total of 21 lay-ups .
on the night. SHS hit 1-of- ,
3 3s and was 18-for-25 at
the line. The Tornadoes had ..
40 rebounds (Dunn 8, Kiser
7, Chapman 6), 18 steals
(Lee, Sayre, Pullins and
Barnes all with three) five
assists and 31 turnovers.
Miller was I0-of-31 on .
twos, 2-of-11 on 3s, and 3for-10 at the line while ·
gathering 25 rebounds
(Britton 7). MiVer had six
steals, five assists and 35
turnovers.
Southern plays in the district next Saturday at I p.m.
at Wellston High School.

This eye-popping new
book is packed with
full-color photos. It
takes you game-bygame through the
Buckeyes' triumphant
2002 campaign, including the thrilling Fiesta
Bowl win over. Miami,
with stories first found
in the pages of The
Columbus Dispatch.
Included are protiles of
the team's biggest
stars, coaches, and
other personalities,
making A Season to
Remember:
Ohio
State's 2002 National
Championship a cherished keepsake for all '
fans of Ohio State
football!
Officially endorsed and
licensed by The Ohio
State University!
8 1/2 x 11 softcover,
160+ pages, color photos throughout

Only $19.95!

Michigan State defeats Ohio State
EAST LANSING, Mich . enough .
(AP) - Michigan State saw a
"We definitely noticed
20-point lead vanish but still them coming," said Roehrig,
pulled off a 65-64 upset of a 6-foot-4 sophomore center.
No. 22 Ohio State on Liz "We just had to hunker down
Shimek's 6-foot jumper with and stay with it. We knew
7. 7 seconds left on the clock. what we had to do by the look
The Spartal)s scored six of in a lot of players' eyes."
the final eight points. Roehrig, who shot 9-for-12
Thursday night.
from the field and 7-for-7 at
Kelli Roehrig led Michigan the foul line, had good looks
State scorers with 25 points at the basket most of the
and nine rebounds.
night, thanks in large part to
Michigan State led 49-29 · the outside shooting of freshbefore the Buckeyes (17 -6, 8- man guard Lindsay Bowen
4 Big Ten) began pressuring and the passing of junior forthe entry pass and started ward Julie Pagel.
drilling
3-pointers. But
Bowen had 16 points and
sophomore guard Caity was 4-for-9 from 3-point
Matter's 22 points, incl uding range. Pagel had a game-high
six 3's and a go-ahead jumper nine assists. And the Spartans
with 35 seconds left, weren't (1 4-8, 7-4) used a 34-26 edge
•

(

in rebounds to overcome
Matter's 6-for-13 accuracy
beyond the arc.
"We always say we don't
want it to be easy," Michigan
State coach Joanne McCalley
said. "But I don' t know if I
want it to be that hard. For
me, it's not about winning.
It's about the lessons you take
from a game like this. And
there were plenty of lessons
to take from this one."
The Spartans survived with
11-for-11 shooting on free
throws and just enough big
plays from their big players,
including a game-ending lineup with three post players.
"(Roehrig's) size was a big
factor," Ohio State coach· Jim
Foster said.
I

Own your personal
copy of this celebration
of Ohio State football
and the first National
Championship since 1968 by ordering today!
Makes a great gift for Buckeye fans everywhere!
r----------------------------~--------,

I1
I

·

How to order:

or,.._

Compltll 1nd retum thl1 order form by 111111
Milt or brtng to: Qalllpolle Deily Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, Qelllpolle, OH 45831 • FAX to (740) 44&amp;-3008

IN•m•------------------------------------------IAdd~•• ----------------~--------------------------

I City

State

IPhone (day)
1Check No.

1Card No.

trlday, February 14,2003

Friday, February 14,2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

ZIP ______

(evening) -----------------Crsdlt Card -----------------------Exp. ______ __

I Signature ------------------------------------------

IPRICE: $19.95 ·Paperback

®allipohs 1Jeailp ~rtbune

L-------------------------------------~

www.mydallysentlnel.com

/

Scoreboard
Prep Basketball
Boys

Thursday
Amanda~Ciearcreek 75, Ashville Teays
Valley so
Ashland, Ky. 65, Portsmou th 64, OT
Beverly Fort Frye 51, Caldwell 26
Cenlervi11e 51, Clayton Northmont 48
Gin . Summit Country Day 66, Cin
landmark Chr. 49
Cle. Heritage 55, Mogadore Chr. 50
Cle. Hts. 88, Lorain Southview 84
COis. linden 79 , Cols. Walnut Ridge 74
Glouster-Trimble 72, Cots . Harvesl Prep
32
Massillon Chr. 100, Medina Chr. 35
Orange Chr. 55 , University Fuchs
Mizrachl 43
Painesville Riverside 60, Chardon 46
Tot Cent. Cath. 58, Tal. Start 48
W. Milton Milton-Union 59, Eaton 51
Worlh ington Chr. 89, Howard E. Kno11 34

Girls
Reedsville E. 51, Beaver E. 50
Reedsville E. 12 7 14 18 - 51
Beaver E.. . . 6 16 16 12 - so
REEDSVILLE E. - Alyssa Holter 3 0-0
7, Krista White 2 0·0 4, JennyArmes 0 0-0
0, Morgan WebG'r 2 2-4 6, Katie Robertson
6 2-2 14, Casey Smith o 0-0 o, Jess Hupp
1 1-6 3, Jess Dillon 0 1-2 1, Jen Hayman 5
6-10 16. Totals 19 12-24 51 .
BEAVER E. - Rebecca Day 9 6-6 24,
Jesse Osborne 2 4-6 9, Jessica Howard 4
1-3 9, Kristen Roberts 2
5, Jessica
Edge111 0.0 2, Stephanie Michael 01 -2 1.
Totals 18 12-17 50.
3-poinl goals- Reedsville E. 1 (Holter),
Beever E. 2 (Osborne, Roberts).

o-o

SOuthern 45, Mlllor 29
Southern ... 11
5 11 18 45
Miller ....... 6 10 5 8 29
SOUTHERN .:...;_ Katie Sayre 2 1-5 5,
Rachel Chapman 2 0.0 4, Brigette Barnes
1 4-4 6, Deana Pullins 3 o-o 7, Amy Lee 2
9-9 13. Ashley Dunn 1 0-2 2, Joanne
Pickens 0 1-2 1, Tara Pickens 0 0-0 0.
Ashley Roush 0 0·0 0. Brooke Kiser 1 2-2
4, Jessica Hill 1 1-1 3, Susan Brauer o 0-0
0. TOTALS 13 18-25 45.
MILLER - Emily Winnenberg 0 2-4 2,
Siers Toth 1 0-0 2. Brlanne Hinkle 0 D-O D.
Mandy Spencer 1 0·2 2, Malaria Altier 0 DO 0, Megan Osborn 0 0-0 0, Ashley Hinkle
1 0·0 2, Sam Britton 4 o-o 8, Kelsl Brown 1
1-4 3, Courtney Hoops 0 0-0 0, Lora
Spencer 2 0·0 4, Jenne Bolyard 0 0·0 0,
Emile Bray 1 0·2 3, Jenna Murphy 1 0·0 3.
TOTALS 12 3-10 29.
3·point goals - Southern 1 (Pullins),
Miller 2 (Bray. Murphy).
Thur11day
Tournament
Division I
Cin. McAuley 45, Cin. Sycamore 36
Cin. Princeton 57, Cln . NW 30
Cols. Brookhaven 77, Cols. Whetstone
43
Cots. Upper Arlington 43, Worthington
•
Kilbourne 40
Fairfield 48. Cln. Anderson 44
Uberty Twp. Lakota East 55, Gin. Walnut
Hills 53
Marion Harding 57, Thomas Worthington
54, 20T
Pickerington 100, Co~ . W. 30 Division II
Athens 63, Lancaster Fairfield Union 57
Carrol lion ss, Steubenville so. OT
Circleville Logan Elm 51, Circleville 38
Franklin 49, Germantown V&amp;lley VIew 43
Gallipolis GaMia 62, Jackson 48
Hamilton Badin 51., Bellbrook 42
Ironton Rock Hlll49, Hillsboro 45
McConnelsville Morgan 52, Cambridge
50
New Concord John Glenn 35, Warsaw
River View 13
Richmond Edison vs. Rayland Buckaye
Local ppd.
Spring. Shawnee 60, Day. Northridge 34
Tipp City Tippecanoe 55, Trotwood·
Madison 47
Urbana 42, Spring. Greenan 37
. Washington C. H. Miami Trace 53, Scioto
McDermott NW 33 Division Ill
· Gnadenhunen Indian Valley 57, Zoarville
Tuscarawas Valley 46
Martins
Ferry
65,
Sarahsville
Shenandoah 59
Richwood N. Union 63, Howard E. Kno11
33
. St. Clairsville 66, Bellaire 38
. Sugarcreek Garaway 57, W. Lafayette
Ridgewood 35 Division IV
· Cln. Chr. 53, Lockland 33
· St. Bernard 45, Cin. Summit Country Day
16
Mowrystown Whiteoak 55, Seaman N.
Adamo 43
Racine Southern 45, Hemlock Miller 29
Reedsville Eastern 51, Beaver Eastern
50
S. Webster 62, Bainbridge Paint Valley
35
Regular Seaton
Akr. Hoben 69, Akr. Bulchel 39
Akr. Kenmore 53, Norton 42
Alliance 48, Alliance Martington 40
Apple Creek Waynedale 60, Rittman 19
Arcadia 60, Dola Hardin N. 33 ·
Archbold 95. Della 29
Ashtabula La~eslde 87, Painesville
Harvey 22
Attica Seneca E. 55, Bettsville 31
Barberton 48, Brush 39
Bethel-Tate 34, Norwood 19
Bloomdale Elmwood 64, Tontogany
Otsego 52
Bluffton 62, l.lam Shawnee 57
Bryan -43, Melamora Evergreen 41
Can. GlenOak 62, Uniontown Lake 38
Can. McKinlay 60, Akr. Firestone 48
Canal Fullon NW 60, Akr. Spring. 37
Carey 52, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 44
. Cle. Collinwood 55, Lorain Admiral King
43
Cle. Hta. Lutheran E . 55, Fairport 49
Cle. Martin L King 62, Cuyahoga His. 57
Cle. Rhodes 60, Akr. Garfield 52
Coldwater 59, Fort Recovery 41
Convoy Crestview 60, Ada 32
Copley 58, Akr. Manchester 41
. Gory-Rawson 49, Arllnglon 33
. Cuyahoga Fails 50, Macedonia Nordonla
41
· Day. Carroll 58, Huber His. Wayne 44
· Day. Stivers 58, Day. Belmont 30
Defiance Tin ora 47, Haviland Wayne
Trace 48
Doylealown Chippewa 85, Dalton 44
E. Can. 60, Louisville Aquinas 57
E. Cle. Shaw 53, Cle. Glenville 34
E. Paleellne 57, Sebring McKinley 38
Elida 73, Continental 58
: Fayettevllle 50, Manchester 33
Findlay Liberty-Benton 58, Leipsic 24
Fremont Ross 61 , Sandusky 42
· Fremont St. Joseph 69, N. Baltimore 56
Gibsonburg 63, Millbury Lake 40
Green 35, Akr. Elms 25
Hamler Patrick Henry 53, Wauseon 43
Hicksville 54, Defiance Ayersvllle 30
Hudson 43, Twinsburg 27
Kalida 46. Ottawa Glando~ 40
Kent Roosevelt 64, Kenston 52
Kidron Cent. Chr. 83, Can. Heritage Chr.

4.6

Lafayette Allen E. 70, Van Wert
Lincolnvlew 26
Libert; Chr. 52, Cola. Tree ol Lne 25
Liabon 49, Salineville S. 38
Magnolia. W.Va. 1fT, Bellaire St. John 43
Manallald 96, Maa~l lon 36
Massillon Chr. 41 , Medina Chr. 17
McComb 47, Vanlue 38
McGuffey Upper SCioto Valley 63, Perry
43
•
~
Mentor 69 , Euclid 50
Minster 65, ROCkford ParkWay 26
N. Can. Hoover 65, Massillon Perry 42
N. Royalton 58, PaffTI&amp; 44
Napoleon 48, Findlay 39
"lew Bremen 46, New Knoxville 37
New Riegel 37, Sycamore Mohawk 35
Newtdn Falls 51 , Cortland Lakeview 24
Norwalk 62, Huron 39
Norwalk St. Paul 73. New Lor1'don 39
Orange 40, Beachwood 24
Oregon Clay 57. Tol. Whitmer 54
Paulding 57 , Delphos Jefferson 43
Pemberville Eastwood 47, Kansas

Lako1a 36
Perrysburg 48, Maumea 33
ROCky River lutheran W. 46, Fairview 36
Rootstown 69, Garretsvllie 50
Shaker Hts. Hathaway Brown 60, Gates
Mills Gilmour 31
Sherwood Fairv iew 56, Antwerp 43
Smithville 70, W. Salem NW 48
Spencerville 63, Columbus Grove 57
St. Henry 49, Delphos St. John's 36
St. Marys 51, lima Cent. Cath. 39
Stow 50, Mayfield 48
Stryker 71, Pioneer N. Cent. 26
Sylvania Norlhview 74, Bowling Green
55 .
Sylvania Southview 73, Rossford 22
Thompson Ledgemont 41, Hudson WAA
35
Tiffin Calvert 54, Old Fort 40
Tol. Chr. 54, Fostoria St. Wendelin 47
Tol. Maumee Valley 53, Ottawa Hills 43
Tol. Notre Dame 53, Tol. St. Ursula 51
Tol. Woodward 61, Tol. Rogers 45
Van Buren 45 , Pandora-Gilboa 44
W. Unity Hilltop 65, Gorham Fayette 57
Wapakoneta 54, lima Sr. 24
Warren Champion 50, Girard 44
Waterford 46, New Matamoras Frontier
38
Waynesfield 47, Ridgeway Ridgemont 46
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne. 44, Holland
Spnng. 34
Woodmore 58, Genoa 48
Wooster 49, Massillon Jackson 30
Wooster Triway 71 , Medina Buckeye 64
Youngs. liberty 60, Brookfield ~5

College Basketball
Mens
EAST
Cent. Connecticut St. 61 , Sacred Heart
58
Delaware 74, James Madison 71
Fairfield 70, Manhattan 68
Fairleigh Dickinson 83, Long Island U. 68
Mount St. Mary's, Md. 56, Robert Morris
. 54
Rider 6$, lena 58
Saint Joseph's 78. Temple 59
St. Francis, NY 81 , Monmouth, N.J. 71
St. Francis, Pa. 72, UMBC 64
SOUTH
Austin Peay 71, Tennessee St. 56
Belmont 72 , Georgia St. 57
Fla. International 56, South Alabama 46
George Mason 70, ,Hofstra 54
Jacksonville 80, UCF 75
Jacksonville St. 74, Samford 63
McNeese St. 70, Northwestern St. 57
Memphis 58, Tulane 57
Mercer 90, MorriS Brown 83
Middle Tennessee 79, Arkansas St. 55
Murray St. 96, E. Illinois 77
N.C.-Ashevllle 75. Radford 68
Stetson 83, Florida Atlantic 78
Tenn .·Martin 77, SE Missourl61
W. Kenlucky 70, Ark.-Little Rock 51
Wake Forest 94, Duke 80, 20T
MIDWEST
Cleveland St. 86, Youngstown St. 76
Detroit 68, Wright St. 63
lnd.-Pur.-lndpls. 73, UMKC 61
Loyola of Chicago 73, Butler 63
Oakland, Mich. 78, Oral Roberts 57
S. llllnois 72, N. Iowa 61
Valparaiso 81 , Chicago St. 70
Wis. ·Milwaukee 81 , III.·Chicago 78
SOUTHWEST
Rice 72. UTEP 66
Sam Houston St. 79, SW Texas 71
Stephen F.Austin 64, Nicholls St. 56
Te»~as-Arllngton 73, SE Louisiana 68
TeMas-San Antonio 61 , Lamar 53
Tulsa 71, Boise St. 55
FAR WEST
Arizona 106, UCLA 70
Arizona St. 108, Southern Cal 78 .
Cel Poly-SLO 82, CS Norlhridge 59
California 63, Washington St. 53
Denver 90, North Texas 84
Gonzaga 73, St. Mary's, Cal. 49
Idaho 75, Long Beach St 67
Louisiana Tech 80, Fresno St.
Loyola Marymount 73, Santa Clara 61
Montana St. 73, Idaho St. 65
N. Arizona 75, Portland St. 64
Nevada 82. SMU 64
Pepperdine 98, San Otego ~3
S. Ulah 78, W Illinois 75
Sacramento St. 77, I;:. Washington 71
San Francisco 72, Portland 55
Stanford 78, Washington 69
UC Irvine 59, Utah St. 58
UC Santa Barbara 62, Pacific 52
Weber St. 75, Montana 72

n

Women
EAST
Fordham 57, St. Bonaventure 50
George Mason 64, Dre11et 46
George Washington 65. Massachusetts
59,0T
La Salle 70, Dayton 69
Manhattan 61 , Fairfield 51
Penn Sl. 60, Purdue 88
Sacred Heart 70, Cent. Conneclicut St.
49
Seton Hall 54, Providence 42
X:avier 64, Temple 56
SOUTH
Ar~ansas 70, Kentucky 60
Auburn 62, Florida 51
Belmont 67, Troy St. 58
Campbell107, Florida Atlantic 90
Duke 82, Georgia Tech 43
E. Kentucky 82, Tennessee St. n
Georgia 97, South Carolina 91, 20T
Georgia St.
Sletson 50
Jacksonville 64, Jacl\sonvllle St. 51
James Madison 76, William &amp; Mary 73
LSU 85, Alabama 43
Lipscomb 76, Centenary 63
Louisiana Tech 87. Fresno St 62
McNeese St. 77, Norlhwestern St. 74
Mercer 85, Samford 57
Morehead St. 70, Tennessee Tech 65
N.C.-Wilmington 64, Towson 39
North Carolina 72, Florida St. 56
Richmond 81, Duquesne 66
S. Carolina St. 79, Charleston Southern
68
South Alabama 70, Fla. lnternatlonal68
UCF 74, Gardner-Webb 60
Vanderbilt 67, Mississippi so
Virginia 58, N.C. State M
Wake Forest 79, Maryland 75
MIDW!ST
Crelghlon 84, Evansville 84
E. Michigan 73, W. Michigan 59
IIHnols 51. SO, SW Mlsooun 91. 56
lnd.-Pur.-Ft. Wayne 64, Te11a&amp;·Pan
American 57
Indiana 89, Iowa 68
LoyoiJ ol Chicago 76, Buller 67
Miami (Ohio) 70, N. Illinois 64
Michigan 51. 65, Ohio Sl. 64
Minnesota 64, Northwestern 61
UC Sanla Barbara 77, llllnola 72
Wichita St 87, Indiana St. 84
Wisconsin 58, Michigan 52
SOUTHWEST
Middle Tennessee 71 , Arkansas St. 63
Nevada 70, SMU 59
SW Texas 72, Sam Houston St. 55
'stephen F.Auotin 62, Nicholls Sl. 45
TeMas-Arllngton 73, SE Louisiana 57
TeMae-San Antonio 56, La.mar 50
W. Kenlucky 77. "rk.·Little Rock 67
FAR WEST
Boise St. 70. "TUlsa 68
CS Northridge 82. Cal Poly-SLO 54
Cal St. -Fullerton 77, long Beach St. 74
Colorado St 58. Ulah 44
E. Washington 77, Sacramento St. 46
Monlana Sl. 95, Idaho Sl. 74
North Texas 90, Denver 81
Porlland 51. 63. N. Arizona 56
UC trvine 72, Idaho 59
Washinglon 92, Stonlord 88
Washington St. e7, California 64
Weber St. 74, Monlana 65 . OT
Wyoming 68. BYU 59

n,

Pro Basketball
National Baaketball Allociatlon
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
L
PctGB
W
New Jersey ... 34
17 .667
Boston ...... 29
22 .569
5
Philadelphia .. 26
24 .520
7'!r
Washington . .. 25
26 .490
9
Onando ...... 25
27 .481
9\
NewYork .. .. . 21
28 .-429
12
Miami . . .... 17
33 .340 16',

Central Olvlelon
W
L
Pet'
GB
Indiana.
. . 36
15 .706
Detroit . . . ... 34
15 .694 1
Milwaukee . . . 26
23 .531 9
New Orleans . 27
25 .519 9Yl
32 .373 17
Atlanta . . . . 19
Chicago
. 17
34 .333 19
Toronto . . . .. 15
34 .306 20
Cleveland .... 10
42 .192 26 '.!
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldweat Dlvlalon
W
LPctGB
Dallas.. .
38
12 .760
San Antonio . 34
18 .680
4
Minnesota ... 31
20 .608
7';,.
Utah . . . . .. 30
21 .588
8'1.
Houston .
27
23 .540
11
Memphis
14
35 .286 23 ~
Denver .
. 12
39 .235 26h
Pacific Dlvlalon
W
LPctGB
Sacramento .. 35
17 .673
Portland
. 32
18 .640
2
Phoenix .. ... 29
22 .569
5 Y~
L.A. Lakers... 26
23 .531
?'"Golden State . 23
27 .460
11
Seattle ..... 21
28 .429 12 Y~
L.A. Clippers . 18
33 .353 15'11
Wednesday's Gamea
Toronto 97, Atlanta 96
Minnesota 102, Cleveland 91
Philadelphia 119, Chicago 11 1, OT
Golden State 113, New York 107
Memphis 97, New Jersey 90
Indiana 83, New Orleans 72
Houston 106. Utah 76
Milwaukee 120, Dallas 114
L.A.lakers 113, Denver 102
Washington 108, LA. Clippers 104
Thursday-'s Gamel
Detroit 98, Orlando 88
Boston 100. Portland 92
Frtday's Gamea
Atlanta at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Golden State at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Chicago at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Dallas at Memphis, 8 p.m.
Orlando at Philadelphia, 8 p.m.
New Orteans at Minnesota. 8 p.m.
Miami at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Detroit at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Washington at Utah, 9 p.m.
New York at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Seattle at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
San Antonio at LA. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday's Games
Denver at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Miami at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Seattle at Portland, 1op.m.
Boston at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
Sunday's Gamaa
Philadelphia at New Jersey, 1 p.m.
Orlando at Toronto, 1:30 p.m.
Memphis at Milwaukee, 3 p.m.
San Antonio at Sacramento, 3:30p.m.
Gotden State at MiPinesota, 3:30p.m.
Indiana at Atlanta, 6 p.m.
Detroit at Cleveland, 7 p.m.
Denver at New Orleans, 7 p.m.
Boston at Phoenix, 8 p.m.
New York at L.A. Lakers. 9:30p.m.

Pro Hockey
National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L TOLPta GF GA
N. Jersey . 35 14 3 4 77 147 t07
Philly .. . . 30 16 9 2 71 132 121
Islanders .. 26 23 5 2 59 153 158
Pitt..... .. 22 25 4 5 53 145 t65
Rangers .. 22 28 7 2 53 150 181
Northeaot Division
W L T DLPto GF G"
Ottawa... 36 14 7 1 eo 187 127
Toronlo .. 31 21 4 1 67 163 139
Boston ... 27 21 5 2 61 162 147
Monlreal . 23 23 7 6 59 154 170
Buffalo ... 15 29 7 4 41 117148
Southeast Division
W L TDLPto QF GA ·
Waehi._. .. 'lJ 21 7 3 64 166 153 ,
T. Bay . ... 22 21 B 5 57 154 162
Florida . 16 21 11 8 51 t29 167
Carolina .. 17 28 6 6 46 121 165
Allanla .. . 19 29 3 4 45 149 196
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L TOL Pta GFGA
St. Louis .. 3015 8 5 73186149
Detroit . . .. 2917 9 2 69 166144
Chicago .. . 23 21 10 3 59 134135
Columbus . 22 26 6 2 52 155168
Nashville .. t9 24 9 4 51 128t47
Northwest Division
W
L T OLPta GF GA
Vane .... 33 16 8 0 74 174 145
Colo.... . 25 14 11 6 67 161 137
Minn ..... 29 19 6 1 67 137 123
Edmon ... 26 t9 6 6 64 156 t54
Calgary .. 18 28 B 4 48 127 167
PacHtc Dlvlolon
W L TOLPta GFGA
Dallas ... 33 11 12 1 79 175112
Ana .... .. 26 19 7 4 63 139138
LA ...... 24 25 4 4 56 148156
SanJose.20 25 6 5 51 151188
Phoenlx .. 19 25 7 4 49 134151
TWo points for a win, one point tor a
tle and overtime lo...
Wednaeday'e Gamel
Columbus 1, San Jose 0
Ottawa 3, Pittsburgh 0
Washington 5, AUanta 1
N.Y. Rangers 3, Florida 1
Toronto 3, Chicago 1
New Jersey 3, Phoenix 0
Minnesota 2, Philadelphia o
Anaheim 4, Calgary 3, OT
Thur-.day'a Gamel
Ottawa 2, Edmonton o
Detroit 4. Bulfelo 2
Columbus 2, Montreal1 , OT
Philadelphia 4, St. Louis 3, OT
Nashville 2, N.Y. Islanders 0
Vancouver 2, Colorado 1, OT
Los Angeles 4, Calgary 2
Frtday'a Qam•
Washington at Carolina, 7 p.m.
Pittsburgh al N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m.
Boston at Aorlda, 7:30p.m.
Tampa Bay al Allsnta, 7:30p.m.
Phoenix at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
San Jose a1 Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Anaheim at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Sotunt.)r'o Gomoo
Edmonton' at Montreal. 4 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at los Angeles, 4 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
Detroit at Atlanta, 7 p.m.
Ottawa at Toronto, 7 p.m
Chicago at Columbus, 7 p.m.
Carolina at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Boston at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
Washington, at Florida, 7:30p.m.
Pittsburgh al Now Jersey, 7:30 p.m.
Phoenix at St. Louis. 8 p.m.
Anaheim at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Minnesota at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Vancouver at Calgary, 1o p.m.

Sunday's Game
San Jose·at Dallas, 8:30p.m.

Transactions
BASEBALL

Am1rJcan League
BOSTON RED SOX-Announced the
retirement of C Dave Nilsson.
KANSAS CITY AOYAL5-Agreed to
terms with OF Raul Ibanez on a one-year
contract.

Eastern
from Page B1
Howard and went the length
of the floor for a lay-in and
was fo uled, then hit the safety to tie the game at 50-50
with 28 seconds left.
Stressed br the situation
and his team s ability to put
the game away, Edwards
called time to rally his
troops. Eastern's Hupp was
fouled and went to the line
where she hit the ftrst of two
for a 51-50 EHS lead.
Heaver Eastern had the
possession, but Jen Haynian
grabbed a key steal and fed
the ball up court to Hupp
who was
had the ball
knocked out of bounds.
Eastern had the ball out of
bounds at mid-court with
I 0.9 seconds, passing the
ball in to Jessie Hupp, who
was fouled.
Hupp, who had already
sunk what proved to be the
game-winner, went to the
line with Eastern up and
missed both double bonus
throws. On the rebound
Beaver attempted to throw
the ball long and Eastern
tipped it around to finally
force a jump ball. Eastern
had the arrow with 1.7 seconds to go, where they successfully in bounded the ball
to win the game.
Much of Eastern's success
in 2002-2003 was its ability
to find a different shining
star in every game. Jen
Hayman took control .early
with some great post play
and a couple baseline
jumpers.
Additionally,
Hayman grabbed several crucial rebounds especially
playing tough with four foul,s
going down the stretch.
Katie Robertson also
played big in Thursday' s
championship. Robertson
dominated the boards and
was 6-9 from the field in her
best overall offensive game
of the year. Morgan Weber
had just six points, but they
were hard-earned as the
Beaver defense keyed on the
talented sophomore who had
many huge offensive games
toward the end of Eastern's
regular season.
Unselfish as a freshman,
Jess Hupp has played like a
veteran much of the season.
Perhaps not shooting when
she could, Hupp has done a
great job of finding the open
man, ending the game with
five assists on Thursday.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Alyssa Holter also had a
great floor game with two
assists and was noted for
some defensive stops ip the
conclusion of the final round.
Eastern looked strong early
and led 12-6 over Beaver at
the end of the first quarter,
however,
the
Meigs
Countians stumbled offensively in the second round,
while also yielding defensively to the Pike County
Eagles. Beaver went on a 167 run to lead at the hal f 2219.
Reedsville Eastern once
trailed by ten in the third
quarter, but came back at the
end of the third round to 3833. As if to wave a magic
wand, Coach Rick Edwards
brought his club to life in the
final round. Down by tive,
Eastern opened the frame on
a 8-0 run. Pressing aggressively, Eastern came up with
several key steal s from
Hayman,
Hupp,
and
Robertson.
Robertson, Weber, and
Hayman cashed in for scores
an Reedsville Eastern had
turned the tables quickly on
the Beaver Eastern crew.
Beaver Coach Rob Day
called for a time out to settle
his troops and right out of the
huddle daughter Rebecca
Day hit a runner for a 41 -40
tally. Holter and Robertson
hit a short jumper and lay-in
for Reedsvtlle Eastern and a
45-40 tally, then Hayman hit
a free throw for a 46-40 tally.
Other
Hayman
and
Robertson scores plotted
around Howard and Day
buckets at the other end,
gave Reedsville Eastern a
50-44 advantage heading
into the final minute. That set
the stage for Hupp's winning
bucket and exciting comeback bid that was fended off
by the sectional champion
Reedsville Eastern club.
Reedsville Eastern hit 18of-48 on twos, and was 1-of4 on 3s, with a 12-for-24
night at the line. Eastern had
35 rebounds (Robertson 12,
Hayman 8, Holter 6), seven
steals (Jess Hupp 2, Jen
Hayman 2) and 10 assists
and 13 foul s.
Beaver Eastern was 16-for48 on twos, 2-of-10 3s, and
12-for-17 at the line. Beaver
had 30 rebounds (Howard 8,
Day 7); 8 steals, and 19
turnovers.
Eastern advances to the
District · Tournament
at
Wellston where they play
21-0 South Webster at 6: 15
on Thursday, Feb. 20.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.:
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
J

.

Subscribe today.
446-2342,

Looded, low miles '"I'" In Stock

From S

'01 LeSabre

..3,. In Stock!

FromS15,900

'01 Grand Am
"5" In Stock!
From

sl

Only ••.ooo low miles

5

14,900

Rur. AfC, lin stock

sl

Tiger gets cold welcome
SAN DIEGO (AP) - His
opening tee shot was still climbing into the foggy sky when
Tiger Woods sighed and held
out his right arm to warn the
gallery where it was headed.
He cursed under his breath:
He waved his hand like a fish
when a putt slithered away from
the cup.
He angrily tossed his wedge at
the bag when he muffed a chip.
Out of competition for two
months because of knee surgery,
Woods showed a little rust and a
lot of liustration Thursday in the
Buick Invitational.
"Just a nasty day," he said.
The golf wasn't all bad.
Woods managed two birdies on the only two holes where he
hit the fairway - .and was I
under through nine holes when
the first round at Torrey Pines
was suspended by rain.
There was no leader in the
clubhouse because none of the
!56 players finished the opening
round. Anun Oberholser, who
last competed against Woods in .
college, was leading at 6 under
with two holes to play.
The round was scheduled to
resume at 7:30 a.m. Friday.
The return of Woods was
highly anticipated, but some of
the excitement was missing
because of a bizarre delay.
Fog was so thick on a couple
Of holes along the Pacific Ocean
that players couldn't see where
they were aiming, so the entire
round was suspended for four

l&gt;ours.
Woods finally made his grand
entrance, and even that was
unusual.
His entourage!l;furity and
cameras marched 'ng a path
toward the first
on the North
Course, although Woods was
not among them. He slipped
into the gallery, virtually unnoticed until someone bumped
into him.
"I needed some space," he
joked.
Even in the misty conditions,
fans saw what they wanted the world's No. I player back at
work. The gallery crammed
around the first tee and stood
elbow-to-elbow on a clubhouse
balcony to get a glimpse of
Woods, who had surgery Dec.
12 on his left knee.

982·7028
MILL

OUTLET

SPECIALS

•WIN•

...

2FREEncms
SPIIIIG IIllO
CIIIEMI1
FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'S. CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WIN I

INGELS CARPET
175 N. 2ND AVE. • Middleport, OH
992-7028

�Page 84 •

'
•'

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 14,2003

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Friday, February 14, 2003

www.mydailysentlnel.com

~ Baseball
..

~rtbune · Sentinel · iegtster

:Jeter the hot topic as Yankees get back on the field
TAMPA . Fla. (AP)
: Noth ing bothers Derek Jeter as
· much as losing. The decision
by George Steinbrenner to
q)lestion his work ethic seems
to ha ve come close.
. ''I went out to the Super
· Bowl - I got people on the
: street asking me the same
:thing : 'What's the deal with
the Boss and the Boss' comments?'" the star shortstop said
Thursday at the Yankees'
minor league complex.
. "This story is not just New
· York. This story has developed
: into a national story."
Steinbrenner questioned the
focus of the five-time All-Star
in December, and the owner's
comments have festered like
an open wound on Jeter over
· the past 7 1/2 weeks.
The Yankees were still talking about it as they took the
field for the first time since
October 's first-round failure
against Anaheim.
Jeter
is
bothered
Steinbrenner questioned his
focus and intends to address
the issue further on Monday,
the day before full-squad
·l"orkouts begin.
. · Jeter, who has helped New
. York to four World Series titles

in seven full seasons, already
spoke with Steinbrenner.
"In my mind, it's over," Jeter
said.
But the Yankees attract international attention these days,
and with no games to play, any
hint of controversy sparks
blaring headlines, such as the
"PARTY ON" blared on the
back page of the Daily News
in New York when Jeter said
he didn't intend to change.
"Derek 's comments were
directed more to people who
write headlines in. the media
than our front office," was the
interpretation of Yankees general manager Brian Cashman.
Still, Yankees manager Joe
Torre is a little concerned.
"We'll talk," he said.
"Obviously, there have been
things going on, and you want
to make sure his head is in the
right place."
Jeter, of course, wasn't
Steinbrenner's only target following the 3-l loss to the
Angels, which ended a run of
four strai~ht AL pennants. The
owner swd Torre and his staff
must do better, too.
"At least I'm not going
down myself," Jeter joked .
To him, this is his first con-

troversy since he became a
starter in 1996.
"My eighth year - !lot
bad,'' Jeter said .
And while Torre has many
former greats in spring training
to give guidance on how to
handle Steinbrenner, he doesn't intend to unleash them on
Jeter. a player he adores.
"I think Jeter would really be
offended if I felt he needed
special attention to have somebody talk to him," Torre said.
As if on cue, Reggie Jackson
arrived at camp on Thursday.
What better person than Mr.
to opine
on
October
Steinbrenner, the Yankees,
celebrity and controversy ?
"It's tough to handle,"
Jackson said. "It's not easy
when you' re a target. This guy
is a big guy, Jeter, a big target.
He's in a class of the great athletes of our day - Ronaldo,
A-Rod, Michael Jordan·, Tiger
''This guy is pretty conscientious. He 's basically the
unnamed captain, the voice of
the club. If you want to target
someone for not having a good
season last year, and this is
what you want to do, then he's
the guy."

CLASSIFIED

TI1e notion
that Jeter
spends
.
. '
too much t1me
gmng
out during the season seems ludicrous
to Reggie - who closed a
saloon or two during his time
as a playe r. Jackso n thin ks
Steinbrenner 's comments \vere
meant to motive Jeter.
.
"He has unflawed character," Jac kson said. "That the
media is aware of, the people
are aware of, and the nation is
aware of. They know M's a
standup guy. All Yankee fans
know this guy is what they
want to represent the Yankees.
We all know that. George is
not attacking his character. If
there 's anybody he'd want to
be in a foxhole with, it's Derek
Jeter."
The 28-year-old Jeter
slipped to .297 with 18 homers
and 75 RB!s last year, the
fourth straight year his average
dropped, and he hasn't topped
100 RB! s since 1999. Torre
think s Jeter was slowed by
shoulder and groin injuries in
2001 and by an injured right
shoulder last year.
"He was just a shell of himself the year before, but he New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter walks onto the field
wouldn't give in ever to saying for a s pring training wo rkout Wednesday in Tampa, Fla. (AP )
anything about it," Torre said.

Gallla Co1111ty, OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To
~ribune
Sentinel
Fax us at: (740) 446·3008
E·mail us at:
classified@ mydailytribune.com

Ad •••

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
H.QW TO WRITE AN AD
11/15/88 - 6/24/02

Brenda WoHe

Sam

Dandy

Michelle Lonas

BrendaWoHe

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Punkin
&amp; Kathy Willis

r

Uttte Hill &amp;
Ellie Mae Hill

Sue Maison

Trigger
(Black Lab)

r
I

\ \ \ Ill \ C I \ II \. I "

sassy

BrendaWoHe

Heather Hill

Cathy J. Davis
&amp; Bill Davis

ANNouNc1lMENrs

r

. ·w

u.s.

:..:.::..:.:.:.::= - - --

, '::~~~~, s~~4llA-4£~s·

Michelle Harris

Atorrcrngt !etten af
0 leur
Xl'llmbled worda

Molly
Dave &amp; Judy Elkins
Michelle Harris

l~ho~

(Yellow lab)

WOlD

IAMl
loy CLAV I. !C~H - -;,__ _ __

bot-

GERMIE

I I'

I

I

G N A T W 1-r,

I J'
I_' . . . .
,.'--------N--.
!

J

J

-

c

•

L--L-..!..-!...-L-..t......J

Trudy &amp; Bobby
Mitchell

Ullian Weese

Forney

Chester

Jessica Theiss

06/20/03 - 10/15/02
Carissa &amp; Trenton
Wolfe

Riley
Jeff and Jane Morris

Michelle Harris

Man to realtor: "I want a house
at least five mites away from any
other house." Realtor: "You want
to live the simple life.' Man: "No, J
want to practice the ·-- - • • ·I'

I0

8 L 0 T A
1-...,.I..,;'~J;:,B,..::,.,..:...-TI.:....::.J,...---l

I

Construction

Company

for enth usiastic pe ople to
work certain Thursdays ,
Fridays, Saturdays and
Sundays in local Qrocery
and mass merchant stores
sampling new prOducts to
consumers. Pay 11 minimum
$8.00 per hour. Hours are
generally 11am to 5pm. Call
(800)747·9S82 Ext. 173 lor
more Information or vlalt
wwW.nclm.com ana click on
Dtmonatratore Nttded .

you

1-omplafo the chuckle Qu01ed
bv filling In the missing words
from orop No. 3 below.

davatop

e rmiR~~8{~~~m I' 12. r ,. I' I' I' ,.. I
0 ~~~fv~RMBLE
IIIIIIII
FOR

Yesterday's SCUM LITS ANSWIRS
Fetish -Hasty- Known- Unlike - HIS WIFE
1 know a fellow who will only go to afternoon bal l
') ames. He claims it's easier to get away from his job
!han it is to get away from HIS WIFE.

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

r

~AL I r•o

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

indiiJidual? Scenic Hills
No Fee Unless We Win I
Nursing center has a posi1-888·582·3345
tton available. ~0-6 shift. If
you ere interested, please
call Diana Thompson at
HOM'IS
{740)446-7150. Or stop by
FOR SALE
and apply In person at 311
Buckrldge Road. Bidwell,
OH (Right behind Spring (3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
to r lmme
·
d'
Va11ey Cinema). We are an
18te possess on a
oq
· ual opportunity employer. within 15 min. of downtown
-------G 1
Help wanted caring for the
a PD s. Aa es as Jow as
elderly, Darst Group Home, ,.,.._ _ _ _ _ _,. 6%. (740)446-3218.
.
. .
1111)
now pB)'Ing mlmmum wage,
BUSINESS
1 acre, rhlerfront, brick and
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am· 1
rr... • .............
b h
~-..,;•i.ill"""'iiiil"""iiiiii-_.1
vinyl
, 3 bedrooms, 2 at , 2
5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pm- .,
7am, caU 740-992-5023.
Galllpolll Careet" Coli- fireplaces . hardwood floors.
.... .,... approximately 2000 sq .ft .
(Careers Close To Home) Full basement, $~ 60,000.
Hv•~
loa~
to Cell Todayl 74Q-446·4367, (740)446-0538
""" company
ng r
l-800· 214.()452 ,
PT/FTcertiliedhelperstodo
Ae 190-05-12748.
3 Bedroom newly remodHeating &amp; Cooling installs- ~~~~~~~::;:,;:~~;:;;;....,
lion. Also looking for
WANm&gt;
eled, in Middleport, cart Tom
Experienced Installer and
rr Do
Anderson after 5 p.m.
0
. ._.~---- 992·3348
Tech with 2 years or more. ~.-.,_
..,
------Send resumes to P.O. Box
3 bedroom , 1 bath, 2 story
572. Kerr, OH 45643.
horne In Pomeroy, good conpeutic foster care giwr. You
will be Reimburse $30-$45 a
day for the care of child In
your home . . Training will
begin January. For more
information
call Oasis
Therapeutic Care givers
Network, Albany, Oh, toll
fr.. l .an-325-1558

r'O

1 11

1 · 11

- - -----IMMEQIATE opeNINGS
Local Office Hao 2B·50
Openings, No experience
Noedod, $8·$9 Par Hour, 1·
888-g74-JOBS

Oomlno 'o Now Hiring all
location• F't. Pleatant,
Golllpollo, &amp; Pomeroy. Soft
drlvotl, mull bt 18. Apply In
peraon at looatlona.

Galllpollo, Ohio now hiring - - - - - - - Delivery Drivers &amp; crew
mambara. all shtfla. Pltaat Ovo•brook contar lo now
accepting application• for
apply with in.
part time office aulttant
(opproxlmatoly 23 houro a
E
C X PI R 1 EdNFC
weok) . ComputerkrlO'Modgo
arpentera wante • am ar Is a muat. Benefltl are evanln all phases of realdentlal able wnh this position. Apply
333
flage Street,
construction , kitche n &amp; bath 81
remodeling,
siding
,
winMiddleport
,
O h 45760.
dowa, dec~s. additio ns, sun E.O.E.
rooms, etc. Must
have
Vllld driver•• llclnll, - -- - -- ---::toots . truck &amp; references. Truck Drlvera, Immediate
Local work . pay baaed on hire, class A COL required ,
experience. Applications excellent pay, expe rience
available at Chrtatla.na required. Earn up to $1,000.
Constr ucti on, Inc. 1403 per wtek.Call 304·675Eastern Avenue . Gallipol is. 4005
M· FI 8-5. Call (740)446·
4514 for more Info

11110

C 0 RPH

1

giver~

Busy Physician office has . Foater
C•r•
STNA's
Needed, Become a thera- Are you a dedicated, ca ring

Eaot Of Chlcogo Pilla Co. ,
1540
Eastern
A.vt.,

I

Faye Klrtchart

4

116
110
llw&gt;WANIID 11
IJFuWANIID 11
IID.PWANJE&gt; I

Immediate_ opening for
Certified Medical Assistant
and Receptionist wfmedical
cod ing experience . Fax
••sumo fo (304)675·3713 or
mall to JR12, 200 Main
Street, Point Pleasant, WV.
25550

Fax us at: (304) 675·5234
E-mail us at:
· classified@ mydailyregister.com

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publshlng reaerves the rtght lo ed~ reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reported 011 the first day of publication and
Tribune-SentlneUieglater wtll be mpondJ1e lor no more than the cost of the space occupied by the error and only the first insertion. We shall not be liable
any lou or expense thlt resultt from the puiiHcatlon « omlalon of an advertlsemenl. Correction will be made in the first available edftion. •Box number
are always confldentiiL •Current rate card applies. • AI raal estate advertisements are subject to the Fede~al Fair Housing Act of 1961. •This news:paperl
acctpts only help wanted ads mltling EOE ltandlrds. We will not knowingly accept any adveltlslng In violation of the law.

rha

law fa farm faur almpla worda.

Bill Davis &amp;
J. Davis

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

needs one or two experlenced workers with building
trades skills. Send resumes
outlining experience and ref·
eren ces to CLA 570, c/o
Gallipolis Dru'J y Tribune, PO.
Box 469, Gal lipolis, OH
4563 1.
Bartender Trainees need· - - - - -- - - ed, $ 250 a day paten DEMONSTRATORS NEEQtlal . Local positions 1-800ED
293-3985 ext. 4060 ·
NCIM has Immediate need

oae8

_ _ _ _...;,.,...;;;

Daily In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
unday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

116

WIJTitor;;;;;;;HW';;;;;;;;w;;,;;;;;._.,l

'".,

Display Ads

1

illTAND

'I'

Word Ads

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

FOUND· v . : : : Has flea
collar. 258 Magnolia dri11e. •
ANIID
C·1 Beer Carry Out permit (740)446-4488 .
Near
tor sale, Cheater Township, Domino's Pizza and Spring ATTN: Point Pleasant.
Meigs County, send letters Valley Cinema.
Postal positions. Clerks/carof lnlorost 10 : Tho Dally
•ie!s!SO!tors.
No
exp.
requ ired. Benefits. For exam ,
Sentinel, PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
- - - - - - - - salary, and testing informsLost two 10 week old lab Uon cat! (630)393·3032 Ext .
puppies. White &amp; Gold . 782. aam-8pm . 7 days.
13041675-7897
Please
check
website
www.dgc.freewebsitehost- _ _ _ _ _ _ __
AHn: We need help, $1200·
ing.com. Very Important Lost- 2 tr ico lor female $5000/m o. 1-866·738·7794
information.
in
Beech www.heartofthegarden.com
Beagle s,
Grove/Whites Hill area,
AVONI All Are as! To Buy or
Reward. 740-74 2·0 107 or Sell . Shirley Spears. 304·
GIVEAWAY
740·592-1 999
675·1429.
2 white female cats to give
away, 2 tigers, 1 mate; lost
black dog, (740)992·3201

Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailysentinel.com

• Start Your Ads With AKeyword •Include Complete

Bates Bros. Amusement Co.
Dogs &amp; puppies 11ery cute,
is looki ng tor enthusiastic
part Australian Sheppard &amp; ~jr--::W.:o:-ANJE&gt;----, Individual s, Spring/Summer
2003, must be 17 or older
Eskimo Spitz call 304-675TO BUY
and able to ~avet , woekly
1487 anytime .
" - - - - - - - · pay, living facUlties, Season
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. End Bonus, contact us at
Silver,
Gold
Colno, 74Q-288·2950
Small 10 week old, smart, Prootaete, Olamonda,- Qold
playful, paper ualned pup- Rings,
Currency,· Wanted someone to alt with
oldorly bed faot man. Day
plat to good homes. M ,T•S• Con
1 Shop, 1•t
o
Addloon area . (740)367· Second Avenue, Galllpollt, thltt &amp; mldnlghta on week·
ondo . (304)87~·376B
740-448·2842.

Miranda, Tristan
&amp; Lexie

l\egt~ter

825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
·Place CallVisit usus at:at:(740)
446·2342
Call us at: (740) 992·2155
Call us at: (304) 675·1333

Your

Lacey

M•ip County, OH

1

dltlon, fireplace, (740)992·

9492
Chlldcare available In down- - - - - - - - town Pomeroy, private pay 3 bedroom, 2 bath, largellv·
only, providing 24 hr. serv· tng room wfflreplace, 1.67
lao, coli (740)892-5827 lor acres, 2 mllao auf ol VInton.
moro lnformollon.
Mull ooll. (740)386-8630
Goorgoo Por1AII&gt;Io Sowmlll, 3 bedroom, olnglo bath ,
don~ houl your logo to tho largo family 100m , flroplaco,
mlll ]uotoall JO-I-076-1ee7. largo living room, comploto
now kltohon, utility room, 2
1 1'\\'\11\1
car ga•ago unanochod, 10
mllu South Galllpollo , In
Eurake, cloot fc Lcoko &amp;
Dam. Phono (7411)256·11949
(740)25e·1243
Strloul
INCTICI!I
lnqulree Only.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· __;_ _...:._____
1NG
racommondo that 3 btdrocm· 1-1/2 bath,
you do bueln111 wnh people w/new 30x30 addition .
you know, and NOT to aend Located on 12 acrea with
monoy through the mall until o10Ckod pond. City Schoole,
you have IO)Ieotlgatod tho (740)448-8901

co.

i:II;....M;:;;:;'"-j
~------_.1
..,
Second Chance Financial.
Looking fo r a Second
Chance
for
borrowing
mona~ or re-establishing
credit. We can help. Good or
bad credit accepted. Call toll
Free.
1.ae6-s 7a. 4 ess
Follow the prompts.

3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms,
fireplace with 7 acres, 2 car
ga•age with 2 out buildings
on Ba shan Ad., 5 miles hom
Che@ler, vtry prlva.te, above
grouOd po ol,
$80,000,
(740)985·3852
:.._..:..__ _ - : - -- 4
BEDROOM
HOME
Forec losure, onty $14,900,
Won't last. 1·800·719-3001
Ext. F144

~~

1

I

r

A

1994 14x64 Liberty Mobile
Home, white vinyl siding , 2
bedroom, 2 bath. remodeled
September 2002
N ew
berber carpet and refri gerator. $ 12 .500 . Must be
moved.
•
17401388 1579

AH real estate advertising
In this newspaper Ia
1ub)eCt to the Federal
Fal H
A f 1968
r ous ng c 0
which makealt Illegal to
advertlae "any
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
race, color, religion, sex
f•mlllalatatus or national
origin, or any lnlen11on to
make anv auch

1

1

1995 14x70, 3

BA 1 b h
,
at ,

heat pump, 2 covered decks,
As~ing $13,000. (740)245 0333

~

P••••r•nce, 11m1tat 1on or
dlacrlmlnatlon."

1995 Norris Mobile Home
Like New. 161176,
2br.

Thll ntwlptper will not
knowingly accept
ldvertlumen1a tar reel
..tate which 11 In
vlcl•tlon Df the law. our
reader• 1 , 1 herebv
Informed that all
dwelllngl 1dvertiHd In
thlt newtpaper are
eveilablt on an equal
opportunity bl••·

Appliances, 3 to n hea t
pump. 8x 10 wooden storage
bid. (304)675-5727

VInyl, Mid Enlry w/pllnty of
otorago. 1 car garage, ll!go
lot Ownl! wil l finance wlfh
$20,000 down, SBOO. Par
month. (304)882-5840

2001 t4x80 Oakwood, 3
BR , 2 bath, all oppllancoo
Included. We 'll make down
poymonl , you Jake over pay·
man11 of $370 monlh, or buy
lor $22.000. (216):151-7086
or (21 8)257· 1485.
_;__.:...__ _ __ _
Blowout sale on a.ll Single
Section nomes save thou sands good until February
29. (740)446-3093
- - -- - - -~Get Your Money 's Worth " at
Colao Mobile Homoo, St . Rt.
50
Eas t
ol
Alhe ns .
Deliveries, se1 -ups. excavatlng, foundations, sewage
systems. driveways. heating
and cooling along with parts
and service. You should
accept nothing less. Since
1967 we are. Cole's Mobile
Homes where you "Get Your
Money's Worth."
_ _.:__ _ _ _ __
Land Home PackaQeS avail·
able. In your are a. (740)4463384 .

1998 Fleetwood Sun Poin te.
16xSO, 3bd .. 2bth, separate
utility room and dining room,
breakfasl bar, total electric,
central air, built in stereo
ayatem, 10x8 storage buildlng . May mo11e or rent 101.
Call (740)446·7426. Asking
Hurrlcono :!Cr. 2ba Briel&lt; and _
S_18_.e_oo_._ _ _ _ __

Ntw homo· 4 btdroom, 2
both. llvlngroom, fam il yroom , dining room dan,
modern kitchen , 2 car
garage, hp, all electric, wllh·
In walking dlotanco Pome roy
Golf Courae, 3 acres,
$118,000,
can
susan
(740)985·4291 , work 74Q446·7287.
Rental house for sale local·
ad at 1410 Lewis 1 Pt.
PIeasant Nla
" ke 011er
u
, cal1
after 5pm, 304·727·3318

s

r

MooFORU.E"J:l?~
.:mu:.

I
•

10 used ho mes under
$2000, Call Karena, 740 _
_
385 9948

Experienced
Diesel
Mechanic. (740)388-8547

·- -··

Mo~U:s~IF$

4 bedroom Brick Home in 1989 Clayton Westwind.
the country on 4-acre lot. 2BR, WID hookup. range,
(740)379-2862
refrigerator &amp; electric furnace . Located on a rented
tot a 64~ Lake Dr. , Rio
G!ande, 7 minules walk lo
campu s. $10.000 080.
(614)2 14-5151

Experltnesd BookkHperPart-tlme to start . Computer
experience a must ARIAP.
PayrollJob
Costing .
Qualified applicants please
send resumes to Christians
Constructio n, Inc. 1403
Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis,
O H 4563 1." No phone calls
please .

·--

r

I

.. ·-

--·- ··-

--

�www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, February

HAPPY AD
Two · 2 BR apartments
available In Syracuse $200.
deposit $330. per mo nth.
Rent Includes Water, sewer
&amp; Trash , No Pets, appllca~------- tlon, Reference &amp; Sutrk:lent
Beautiful River View Ideal Income to Qualify 740·378·
For 1 Or 2 People, 6111
References, Deposit, No
SPAcE
Pets. Foster Trailer Park,
FOR RENf
740·441-018 1.

3br. house. 2 different
mobile homes for rent. AU
have Washer/Dryer. All
located at Glenwood. 304·
576·9991

New 14x70. 3 br/2bth. Only
$995 down and only
$197.62 pe r month, Call
Ni&lt;kl 74()-385·7671
- - - - - - -New 2003 Ooublewide. 3 BR
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down
and &amp;295/mo. 1·800·691·
.:..67_7_7_ _ _...:..____
Nice lots available lor up to
16x60 mobile homes, $115
wate r mctuded. (7 40)9922167

i

- - - - - - -- ..,___iiiliiiiiiitio-,.1
Mobile Home for rent. Next
to Ci ty li mits in Point
Pleasant. (304)675-2359
between 6-9pm.
- - -- - - - - Trailer with kitchen furnished , no pols. (740)256·

Trailer for sale with lot ,
14xBO. very good co nd. heal
pump. private lot. porches,
very reasonably priced to
sell Hantord 304·882·2369

r
-

Mason Co. ~ 7 miles from
Milton e~it of 1·64 ne ar At 2
w/city water. large lots for
Double &amp; single Wide mobile
home. Vinyl sid1ng &amp; shingle
root only. Owne1 financing
w/down payment $22 .000.
(304)562·5840
Patriot area. 20+ wooded
acres. county water &amp; electnc available . homes ite.
Borders Wayne Nat1onal
Forrest. excellent hu nting,
138.000 (740)379-9 141
IH '\I \I S

10

Hous~
IUH REI&gt;T

t ...J Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo., 4%
DoWn, 30 Years at 8.5%
APA. For Listings. 800-3193323 Ext. 1709.
t BR House in Rac1ne. with
water. sewer. trash $325.
Momh . No Pets (740)9925039
2 story frame house. 2 bedrooms small yard. Quiet
neigh borhood close to town.
205 8th Street. Newly redec·
orated. $425. a month. $300.
deposit
Refe rences.
(304)675-2651
3 · bed room house in
Middleport, $375 plus
deposil, (740)992·3194

3br. House located in
Mason. WV. $495. + Utilities.
~ Pels. (3041773-5881
Clean warm 2 bedroom
home in Pomeroy, w/optiont~ buy, $400 a mo.. good ref erences. (740 )698-7244
f-touse for rent Sand hi ll Rd.
~· Pleasant 3br, LR, Family
f=lm . 2-bath. $500/month.
Large Workshop. (304)6753~12
..;
d-ne_ b_e-dr-o-om
-ho-u-se_ i_n
Bidwell w1th refrigerator &amp;
siove . Gas heat with new
carpet. For more informalion, please call Sharon &amp;
Sco11 Howell al (740)388·
0041
i}w houses lor rent both in
Gallipolis
limi ts.
47
Chillicothe Rd , 25 Evans
Heights Both 3 bedroom.
$400 per mont h a nd $400
deposit.
References
r~qu ired . Day {740)256 .
6456 Even1 ngs. (740}256·
1 ~30.

1':

ffiR

Ho~

RENT

r:

_17_~_194

~-------

I

14x80 trailer located at
Glenwood, stove, refridg. ,
microwave furn ished 304576-9991 .

Now Taking Applications35 West 2 Bedroom
Townhouse
Aparr ments,
Includes Water Sewage.
Trash, $350/Mo.. 740· 446 .
0008.
-------Pleasant Valley Aper1men1
Are now taking Applications
tor 2BR . 3BR &amp; 4BR ..
Applications are taken
Monday thru Friday. from
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant. WV
Phone No is (304)675·5806.
E. H.O

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
1/2 Bath. Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start S385/Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Security
2 bedroom trailer. $275. t Deposit Req uired. Days:
Utilities and $275 . Deposit. 740·446·3481 ; Evenings:
Meson. (304)675-191 1
740-387-0502.
2 bedroom. air. very nice. no - - -- - -- Twin Rivers Tower Is acceptp;ts, in Gallipolis. (740)446- ing
applications tor waiting
2003 (740)446-1409
list tor Hud-subsized. 1_ br,
call 675 -6679
3 bedroom mobile home for aparlment,
EHO
ren t, no pets, (740)992-5858

2 bedroom mobile home,
Minersville area. newly
redecorated ,
references
req uired , daposil required.
$300 per month, call
(740)992·6777 after 5pm.

February 15th
All packs $5.00 each
Starburs! $1900

The
Cash
Baals
Annual
Financial
Report or tho Scipio
Township for the year
ended December 31 ,
2002 has been com·
plated and Is available
for public Inspection
at 36385 SA 143,

I'III*Ntlkft II Nmplptn.

o..r.

-

\'- ~ lo ~. Ddl""" ltJpt .. y.,.,.

Pomeroy, OH 45789
between S p.m. and 8
p .m. A copy ot the
report can be provld·
ed upon requaat to
Scipio Townahlp r:/o
Connie
Chapman,
Clerk at the above
addreu.
(2) 14, 2003

&amp;

•

You could be
eligible for FREE
help getting
back to work
For more information,
call Gallia Meigs
Community Action
Agency
(740) 992·2222 or

"C'-et"
n
OUr lt' ttle
LSweetheart
ove, Mom, Dad,

St~hanie &amp;

';,;:::=:e:d===~

Fl111 D

(740) 446·1018

Auros
FOR SAJE

L,-------,.1
actual mi les. nice $5000
11rm. (740)379-9047
98 Dodge Gr. Caravan; 00
Ford Focus, $4200;
98
ChEN Malibu, $3295;
96
Chevy lumina, $3BOO; 95
Pontiac Gr. Prix $3295; 99
Pontiac Gr. Am , $4995; 96
Ford MuS1ang $3495; 99
Ford Escort $2595; 97
Mercury Tracer $2295; 98
Chevy Cavalier, $2400; 96
Ford T. _Bird, $2595; 98
Dodge
Neon, $2595: 87
Chev. Celebrity. $350; 96
Ford Escon, $1295; B&amp;D
Auto Sales, HWY 160 N,
(740)446-6865

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steet Beams, Pipe Aebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steal
Gra'tlng
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, 8em·4:30pm. Closed
Thursday, Saturday &amp;
Sundoy. (740)44&amp;-1300
Pro-pane gas heater, newpaid $212. sell $150,
(740)992·5949

iir~~o~--~--.---.

i

D\.1~

L,--·SuPPI.Dsiiiioiiiiiilt-,.1
Block, briCk, sewer pipes,
windows. lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio GrancM, OH
Call740-245-5121 .

IMPOUNDS!
QVV
Hondu, Chevyo, etcl Cars/
,r
.. ~· from ~
••~ . For 11~"~
.,
lnge 1·800·719·3001 ext.
3901

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4 :30
Elirly birds start
6:30 lsi Thursday
of every month

All pack $5.00
Bring Ibis coupon
Buy $5.00 BoniiiiZ8
GetS FREE

PC DOCTOR

&amp;t

love

The Dally Sentinel • Page

Valentine's Day to make up

it. -

ROY HARRIS,

touched by your sentiments,

ALL

such.
But when it comes to loving,
admit

that

I'm

not

much.

• Stump

On your very special days.
I thought that it would make

Grinding

up
For the words I didn't say.
I told you that I'd love you
Until the end of time.

• Bucket Truck

We Make House Calla

And that I would let you

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades,Neh¥orks

know

If I

ever changed my mind.

But that's not what you

(304) 675·5282
doctorOwv dr.com

BISSEll

Best Service at
the Best Price

Pomeroy

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

Wll
New&amp; Used
Dean

475 South Church St.
Ripley,

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

WV 25271

1·800·822-0417
"W.V's Ill C hevy , Pontiac. Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

"lloatmyahlrt
~~r•tntheatock

market!"

"Not mel
Foe~ ~•tim•tt,_

r..,., i~ lmmc pid up

Call llll fllf Ill YQIIHOIJ'Cltllcr n«&lt;h

(740) 446-1812

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Flnonclol Services,
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone: 843-5264."

Ad:,us ahcur bu.r
ServJce PICJns.1

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
74()..949·2217

that.

You want burning passion,
And I'm a little flat.
Life goes on, the days go
by,

The months tum into years.
Some are fjUed with laughter,
/
Some- are
But

filled with tears.
one thing that will

never change
And that's
Although

I

my love

YORK
DEAR EAGER: Religion
has nothing to do with it.
Traditionally, your fiance's
parents should make the first
gesture. They can either telephone your parents and plan
to get together, or if finances
permit, offer to host a tea, din·
ner

or

rule for you.

don't express it,

It' s honest and it's true.

Lots of things that matter

buffet

However, this is a

supper.
flexible

since eventually you

will all be family, no one
should stand on ceremony.
Mazel tovl

Dear Abby is wrinen by
Abigail Van Buren, also
But having you beside me
known as Jeanne Phillips. and
Is what matters most of all. was founded by her mother,
I
love
you.
Happy
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Valentine's Day.
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
DEAR
ABBY:
My
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
boyfriend and I just became
Angeles, CA 90069.
Some

I can' t

recall,

engaged. After we call our
parents

to

announce

our

Newspapers are a
wonderful/earning
tool for students,
and a great
resource for school
projects about
history, science,
politics, the arts,
and more.
Newspapers are
a perfect way for
young people to
learn about their
communities.

around the
track
37 -Stanley
Gardner
36 Say firmly
39 Expert
40 Bottle
41 Advance
42 Shlth44 Caaaowarv

Restrict confidential family yield rewards.
own. Your present plans are fea·
issues lo the confines of your
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - sible and can produce the types
Bv BERNICE BEOE OsOL
home !oday. Any loose talk It's very kind of you to attempt of results you desire,
A number of important when played back could be con- to spare someone s feelings, but
changes could take place in your siderably distoned and eugger· should you try to camouflage
CAPRit:ORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
It fcsty le m the year ahead.- A few ated in the transmission.
your statements today m order to 19) - Only if you stand up for
wlll be of your o~n volttton, but
GEMINI fMay 21-June 20) cover up somethmg, the person your rights today instead of deo~hers could be · m ~espouse to You'll end ~p huning others could be hurt worse.
·
pending on the whims of some·
ctrcumstances. All wrll work out more by renegmg on a pledge
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov._22) one else will your chances for
well. however.
than &gt;:o~ would if you didn't Even ~hough you are m a receiving that to which you're
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-feb. 19) make tt m the first place. Back good achtevement cycle. you entitled 6e good.
.
- Do not dtsregard the tdeas or up your promises or commit· could usurp your progress today
sug~estions of others today until ments with sincerity today.
by being overly influenced by
Know where to look for royou ve thoroughly mulled them
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) self-doubts. Disregard them and mance and you'll find it. The
over in your mind . There"s a - · The possibilities for attaininJ( have faith in your talents and Astro·Graph Matchmaker wheel
good chance that someone else's pe!"Sonal gains tooay are enf&lt;lur· abilities.
instantly reveals which signs are
tho ughts could be better than agmg, but only tf you don I get
SAGITIARIUS
(Nov. 23· romantically perfect for you .
yours.
careless. When negotiating a Dec. 21) - Be careful today not Mail S2 to Matchmaker, c/o this
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) business mutter. keep your focus · to place more credence in the newspaJICr, P.O. Box J·67 ; Wick'
- Steer clear of a person today on the issues at all times.
ideas of others than you do your liffe. OH 44092.()167.
who has reason to be jealous of
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ·
your recent achievements con- There's a thin line between be~
SCRIMMAGE" SOLunON BY JUDD HAMBRICK
cerning your work or career. ing supportive of your loved
1: 10011
lr*•lno
Answer
This indtvidual is looking for ones and being possessive of
to
111 DOWN • 21
ways to upstage you.
them. If you overstep it, the very
ARIES (March 21-April 19) ones you attempt to help could
previou
2ndOOWN • 93
- If you truly intend to accom· rebuke you today.
·
Word
plish what you set out to do toVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)3n!DOWN • 142
day, being timid cannot play a Disappointment is in the offina
role in your acttons. You must today if you expect thin)!S to
4th00WN • 14
mage ·
be b o ld and determined without simply fall into your lap Wtthout
343
b eing reckless.
your expending the proper efAVERAGE GAME 221).230
Juoo·s TOTAl
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) fort. Onfy work and tenacny will ~..::"::,.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....J L--....J

\fORD

My money is wilh
Open 9am-5pm

need more than

34Sect
35 I love: Lit.
36 Once

1

2
3
4

5
6

7
8
9

10 Aurora, to 38 Grad
Socrates
43 School ·
13 Skillful
house
18 -transit
clangers
.i
20 Banjo
45 HeavyDOWN
cousin
(rock
··
22 Credit
genre)
Pipe
24 Blackguard 47 Snares
Distant
49 "Hold the
Jedl master 25 Aden's
country
-1"
EnthUI·
26 Fete
. 50 Medicinal
Ia am
27 Take· plant .
Genetic
(disconcert) 51 Insult
letters
28 Conlcat
52 Foot digit
Engrave
home
53 "http:/1 • • ."
Becauu of
30 Luau dance 54 Flee
(2wds.)
32 Noun or
56 Writer
NabOkov
verb
-Tolstoy
novel
37 Weasels
MaeWeat
out of
role

Saturday, Feb. 15,2003

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages .
• Replacement
·

'I'Rucxs
SAlE

You

1 Bad hair4 Keats
opus
7 Valley
11 Roawetl
crasher
12 Windsor' s
prov.
13 Sound
14 Scoundrel
15 Slicker
16 Bargains
17 Take a hike
19 Wounded
21 "I knew III"
23 Goofy
26 Gangatera'
guns
29 Feng31 Modem
33 Fortaa and
Lincoln

kin
46 TV genie
portrayer
48 Peel and
Bovary
52 Ball·gown
fabric
55 Hgt.
57 Completely
58 Paperless
exam•
59 Comic
-Lillie
60 Me
opposite
61 Shade
trees
62 Earth's star
63 AbOve, In
verse

Astrograph

740·992·1717
St Rt. 7 Coeglein Rd.

tradition, Abby? EAGER
CELEBRATE IN NEW

TO

ACROSS

B7.

want to hear

www.wvpcdr.com

(740) 992-3194
992-6635
BUILDERS IDC•

ill3411i90~-~----.

MillS

FUllY

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me :b tt b r you'

CONSTRICnOI

Uftlllct'•·--

-

Scrim·

WORD®©®CD@@@@®·
0000000
" ~

I

100

®@®@@@@

0000000
®@®@@®®
0 9.?? 0 ?9. 4MettorT~al
·@@@C9®®®
+3Porns

0
0

0

~2~g~~~ !'~~~,;o~l 0
AVERAGE GAME 171).180
by JUDD

HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT; 20 MIN

DIRECl10NS: MeN • ~- to 7-letter word I rom lhll IBners on eacn yardtlne
Add pok'IIIIO MCh word Of letter using scoring directlooS al ngt'IC . Seven-181181'
WOI'dl get • 80-tX*t bonus. All woldS can be louM in Webstefs Naw Wont!
Cc&gt;11100 C&lt;c:llonlry.
JUOO"S SOLUTION TOMORROW

·-

Building over 30 years
Footers, Foundation,

Add-Om;, New Homes,
Pole Barns, Concrete,
Elecuic. Plumbing
l n.wrm11't \.10rk Jnclr1ded

(740) 992-3320
Email: blad8s@ zaptink.com

rBoA~s~O'IOIIS I 'HOWARDL.
94 Stratos, 17'6ft bass boat,
black &amp; sliver with white bot·
tom, gray carpet, 120 hp.
Evlnrude trolling motor,
rebuilt last year from lack of
use, runs great, looks great,
$7500 080, (740)742-4011

2002
Ex1endad
Cab
Deramax Dually Dieael3500
LT. Absolutely loaded . 6,800
mites. $38.000. (304)875·
3012
1
anyt me.

rib

I

I

be.

And mow the grass and

Top • Removal • Trim

ADVICE

have a way with words. I was

bills

Tree Service

I should mention that both
families are Jewish. Is there a

DEAR ROY: Not all men

I go to work and pay the

JONES'

engaged couple out frrst?

NEW BOSTON, TEXAS

I'll

family

family should invite the future
in-laws'
family
and the

Dear
Abby

wife the following poem for
for

which

should call the other first • the
bride' s or the groom's? Which

you"

.,

(10'K10' 610'K20')

engagement.

department. So I wrote my

OF

MANLEYS
HARTWELL
SELF STORAGE
STORAGE
97 BeechSt
10x10
middleport, OH
10x20

-------Income TBJC Specials- 1994
Plymouth Acclaim, 76K
miles. $1700; 1993 Met"cury
Topaz, 4dr, $1700; 1990
Ford Tempo, 4dr, 99K miles,
$1600; 1990 Ford Taurus,
4dr, $1500; 1990 Toyota
small truck, $995; super
specials- 1995 Ford Aspire,
74K m~es, $2995; 1994
Mercury Cougar XR7, 74K
m»es, $2995; 1993 Chevy
Cavalier,
2dr,
$2995;
RIVERVIEW MOTORS, 2
blocks above McDonald&amp;,
Pomeroy, Ohio, (740)992-

j

"I

I usually buy you flowers

HOLLEY'S AUTO SALES
Tax Time Speclots
1987 Mercury Topaz $895
1986 Dodge D50 truck $795
1988 Ford Ranger $1295
1984 F· 150 $800 1991
S-10, 4&lt;4,$3995 1996 GMC
Jimmy, 4dr, $7995; ~ 996
Plymouth Neon, 4 ctoor,
auto, $2995. (740)446-2000

r*'

the

WHAT MATIERS MOST

740·992·5232

- - - -- - - - 94 Stratos, t T6" bass boat,
black &amp; silver with white bot·
tom, gray carpet, ~ 20 hp.
Evlnrude trolling motor,
rebuilt last year from lack Of
use, runs great. look&amp; great,
68 Chevy 1500 4x4, 340, 5 $7500 OBO, (740)742-4011
1987 Chevy caval~r, runs
goad. $450. (740)448· 9471 sp, high mlleo, $2500 OBO,
.., I H' t I I "
(7o40)742-.4011
1990 Oktl Clerra, 4 cylinder,
au1o, runo good. Call 68 Chevy 1500 4•4, 340, 5
· HOME
(304)675-5812 or (304)675· sp, high mttea, $2500 OBO, L,-·IMPRoiiiiiiliiiiitVIi".l'&gt;IDn'Siliii-~,.1
5859
"(7·40~)7;,;;4:;2·;40::,;1.:,1_ _ _,
BASEMENT
1994Bu~kRtgal,allpower,
MOTORCYa.lli
WATERPROOFING
air, Hit, cruise, aml1in 081· ,
. Unconditional lifeti me guarutte. 148,000 miles, In great
antee. local referem::es fur·
condition , asking $3,000, 1987 Honda 250 Rebel, only nlshed. Eslablished 1975.
(740)992·00&amp;4
2000 original mlleo, Brand Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
~
Geo
Metro,
-speed,
new SBdle bags in the box, 0870, Rogers Basement
1
5
7
2Dr, 51500 neg.; 1995 s-10, $2
-~200
~· -17_40_1388-8
_ _o__o _ _ Waterproofing.
4.3 engine, automatic wtth -:long bed, $2200 neg. 1988 Yamaha Blaster 4
(740~19
wheeler, runs &amp; looks good ,
l ' ·• .....
rebuilt moto r &amp; stainless
1995 Pontiac Grand Prl•.
Fmh pipe, $1 100, (740)992- - - - -- - - C&amp;C
General
Home
V-6 , pw, pl. Aulomatlc . 9986
M·
p
S39i5 (304)773·5098
- : : - : - : - - - - - - - a1n1enence· aintlng, vinyl
1995 Honda 300 Atv. siding , carpentry, doors,
1995 Saturn, 40, like new, Excellent Condition . Adult windows, baths , mobile
$2895; 1995 20 , 1996 2D, Rider.
obo. home repair and more. For
52 ,500.
1996 4D Grand Ams; 1996 (304)S75.2844
free estimate call Chat, 740·
and 1997 Cavallero; 1994 -:::-:-~----- 992-6323 .
and 1995 Berettas; 19 care 1998 Yamaha Kocllak, 4
and trucks In stock. COOK
MOTORS (740)«8--l03 whHI drive, good condlllon,
$2900 DBO, (740)992.0512
Custom
Buitd1ng
&amp;
1999 Taurus SE Blaclc ext.,
Remodeling for aU your
Tan Int., loaded 1 owner
lloAisFOR&amp;SMAJEO'IOIIS home repair needs, in the
$8,500. 875-3507 after6pm. ~
. business tor over 18 years.
(740)992·1119
87 Corvono, 26,650 mites, 1997 Mereda MX-1 Sport
white with red interior. 17' 1O" with 110
135
Always garaged, loaded. Mercruiser. loaded , excel(740)379-2218
lent condition. garage kept,
Superior
Home
96 Dodge truck, 2 wheel used very lit1le. Trailer has Maintenance. We do all
drive, hood needs painted, spare lire mounted. All for repairs
on
homes .
$3,200 or best offer. $7,000. Call (740)446-2444 Carpentry, pl um bing , lloors.
(7ol0)256·1233
anytime or leave a message. wate r tanks. (740)441-011 3

s•- POUCE

in

ers will

Pomeroy, Ohio

Gas Savers
1996 Neon, 4cly, auto,
$2295; 1995 Conlour, 4cty,
5sp, $2295; 2000 Kia, 4cty,
5ep, $2295; 1993 Sunblrll,
4cty, auto, $1295: 1996
Myslquo 4cly, au1o. $2595;
more to choose from, Star
Auto Sales, Racine, Oh ,
(740)949·2451

r
--.

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

33795 Hiland Rd.

r

I

Cellular

Self-StOrage

r

r

cent

~~~
High&amp; Dry

98 Chevy l umina, 39,000

I{Ai

DEAR ABBY: Like many
m e n, I often find myself reti·

as I'm sure many of my read-

Four Wheeler, 2000 Honda
Marlin 22 magnum riHie with Recon, $2000. Farm tractor, •
FOR
3x9 scope, $200; 2 Chinese 2000 Ford, $.o4000. Call
97 Forll XLT. Black, 4x4,
SKS riffles, synthetic stocks, ~740)256·6663
$200 each; Ruger MKI 22 - - - - - - - - good condition, new tires,
1 t 1 6~ bl ed $200 Joh n
Deere
Compact must soot (740)379·9125
Ps 0 •
u ·
·
f740)446-2Af\mQUES906
Tractors. Anancing as low - - - - - - - as 4.5% and 0% down with 98 Ford F-150 $4900, 97
John Deere Credit Approval. Dodge SLT PU, $6900; 99
..__ _ _ _ _ __. Carmichael Equtpmenl, Inc. Dodge Dakola, $3995: 97
Buy or sel l. Riverine Huntington, WV (304)736- Ford F-250 K.C&amp;b, $5200;
2 120.
Gallipolis,
OH 98 Dodge Dakota, K.Cab,
Antiques, 1124 East Main ,(.7..,;40p:):;,44;;6;.;·2;.;4,;;12;__ _..,. $5000; 97 Ford Aero Van,
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- 11
$
1795; 97 Chevy Astra Van,
992 _2526 _ Russ Moore ,
owner.
LIVFSIOCK
$2995: 98 Dodge Gr.
Caravan, $3995; 92 Chev
~~-----Conv. Van, $1795. B&amp;O Aulo
Victorian wash bowl &amp; pitch· 100% PUREBRED BOER Sates,
HWY
160N,
er (Ironstone England GOATS Few kids tor sBie. (740)446-6865
adults.
Prowen ~,r.;.;~;::.~~-.,
1890), $325, (740)992.0274 Some
Champion Bloodlines, Gallla
VANS &amp;
~ County grown . (740)245· L,---4-iiWDsOioiillio-_.1
~
~~
. 0485 after 5pm.
,
_ _ _...;__ _ _ _ 1986 Chevy S-10, 4x4, eJd.
2 three drawer chest, one 5().. 608 Shaults, (740)949- cab, 2.8 engine, auto, trans·
VCR chest, $50 each for all 2908 or (740) 949·2017
mission, (740)446-2427
of lhem, (740)992·1909
· lfAv&amp;
BURN
Fat,
BLOCK
GRAJN
1986 Dodge Ram Charger,
L,~-------,.1 4x4, full size, auto, lots of
Cravings , and BOOST
new parts, driven daily,
Energy Like
You Have Haylage rounct bales 60-90 (740)992-()622
Never Experienced.
% Alfalfa about 2000 lbs
WEIGHT· LOSS
$35-$40.00 per bale 304· - - - - - - - REVOWnON
682·3251
2000 Ford Ranger Club
'New product launch October
Cab, 4x4, automatic, V6,
A/C, 50,000 miles, excellent
23, 2002. Call Tracy at
condition.
$12,000.
0
(740)441-1982
[
~~
(740)446-4053

New &amp; Used Heat Pumps·
Gas
Furnaces.
Free
Eattmates. (740)448-6308

AMERICAN LEGION
MIDDLEPORT

I

E'.Qu:rMoo

_ _ _ _J_E_
T_ _ _ _
AERATION MOTO~S
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
StOCk. Call Ron Evana, 1.
800·537. 9528 .

6:30pm

NOTICE

~~

IriO

Jacqueline's "Livln' Dolll"
Preoenltng Apple Valley
Doll• &amp; &amp;
Kl ls. Cuolom made
babies
toddlers for that
spec lot someone, or make
your own, your way! Many
lacea, eye colors, hair color
-•;
d
&amp; s tyl es, .,..
n tonea, an
body otyloo to choooe from.
Clothing also available.
Compare to Middleton and
My Twlnn Cuddly Babies
Call tor more Info rmation.
(740)44e ee40

PUBLIC
NOTICES

SALE j

· Beautiful tou r door, solid •---~---.,
pine armoire. Blond color.
PETs
1 and 2 bedroom apart· Holds TV, stereo compo- .
fOR
ments, furnished and unfur- nents, tour drawers. $1,100. --nished , security deposit Only serious inquires; AKC Airedale puppies, loyal
required , no pats, 740-992- Stereo system. Surround
2218 .
sound receiver, am/fm radio pets, great hunters, protecand cassette unit and five- tivo farm dogs, $2 50 •
(740)992-7688
t Bedroom Apartments disc CD player. Four speakStarling
at
$289/mo, ers plus sub·wooter, $500. AKC Golden Retrievers,
Wa sher/ Drye r Hookup, (304)675-t502 after 6pm
$200 each. (740)643-0013
Stove and Refrigerator.
(740)441-1519.
For Sale: Reconditioned Big Head Pit Pups, house
washers, dryers and refrlg· dogs, serious inquiries only,
(7 40)388·9199
1 or 2 BA Appt. tor Rent,
erators.
Thompsons $200
Utilities Pd ., No Pets
Appliance. ·3407 Jackson (740)339-261 0
992-5858
Avenue, (304)675-7368.
For sale· old English
pups, first shots
Sheepdog
2 bedroOm on 5th Avenue, GE washer &amp; dryer set,
&amp;
wormed
, lovable, $200
aU new inside, $300 month+ $150; Whirlpool washer,
utilities &amp; deposit. No pets. $75; Kenmore Dryer, $65, an each, call (740)985-9823
(740)446-7903
white after 6 :00. (740)446- Lab puppies, AKC. Proven
hunting stock, Champion
9066
2 bedrooms- 6 month lease
bloodline. Boxhead, Dnertail
Garage Apa rtment , utilities -G-o-od--U,-ed--A-pp_t_la-nce-s, $150. (740)643-22sB Ready
paid, no pets, no parties. Reconditioned
and now I
$550 month plus $550 Guara nteed.
Washers,
Cockatiels,
deposit. {740)446·0241
Dryers,
Ranges,
and Parakeets,
hampsters,gerbils
for sale.
Refrigerators, Some start at
3 bedroom. bath , washer{ $95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 Dog tor Giveaway. (304)675·
dryer hooKu p. no pets. Vine St.. (740)446·7398
5354
Centena ry
Road. Call
Texas Heeler puppies, 6
(740)446-9395 aller 5pm.
King size mahress/box weeks old, 575 . 8 pups to
springs w/steel frame, clean
Apa rtme nt Available Now. bedding, new condition, choose from. (740)379-2701
AiverBend Place. New
__
9·_24_1_1____·___
Haven. VN now accepting
applications for HUD-subsi- Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark - dized , 1 bed room apartChapel Rood, .Poner, Ohio. Vonodll McCloud
ment Utilities included Call (740)446-7444 1·877-830· 7-5-t823
(304)682-3121 Apartmenl
Congretulellon•l You have
availa ble for qualified sen- 9162. Free90Estimates, Easy
88 won 2 free movie tickets to
financing,
days
same
ior/disabled person. EHO
cash. Visa/ Master Card .
Drive· a· little save alot.
the Spring Valley 7
BEAUTIFUL
APART· . _ - - - - - - - Gallipolis. Call lho Sentinel
~~~~~~
J=~~~~~ New sola &amp; Chair, $399. lor delalle. 740 992·2155
9x12 carpet, room size $50.
FR.urrs &amp;
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Mollohan Carpet &amp; Furniture '--•VoiiiEGiiill'fAIIIBliiiiiiiiiliiiio_.l
Drive !rom $297 10 S383 · (740)446-7444.
Clark '
Walk to sho p &amp; movies. Call Chapel Road, f)orter, OH .
Debra Young
740-446·2566.
Equal
Congratulations! You have
Housing Opportunity.
Used furniture store, 130 won 2 free movie tickets to
- - - - - - - - Bulaville Pike. We sell mat· the Spring Valley
7 In
Duplex Apt. 3br. Living room, tresses,
bunk
beds, Gallipolis. Call the Register
DR , kitchen, 1 1/2 bath. dressers, couches, appl i· today tor detalls.(304)675$300. month. + Utilities. Ref. ances, bedroom suites , 1333
Required. (304)675·2495 recl iners. Grave monu- - - - - - -- after Bpm
ments.
(740)446-4782 Taking orders for Florida
-------Gallipolis,
OH.
Fresh Strawberries, Fresh
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed~-~----- Gulf Shrimp, Vi ne Ripe
room apartments at Village
Wingback Recliner; Ethan Florida Tomatoes. Delivery
Manor
and
Rivers ide
Allen Dresser; Poster Bed, Maroh 41h. (304)593-2127
Apartments In Middleport. 40" Oak Dresser base; 50"
From $278-$348. Call 740- Style Maker Hutch; Waterfall
992 -5064. Equal Housing Chosl and Desk. (740)268·
Opportunities.
'6522
Modern 1 bedroom apart·
SPORnNG
FARM
menl (740)446-0390
Gooos

Arevau
laldaHP

On
Valentine's Day

~:3:~;:0-742·4011 ,

i

~""

r

m;:-:~-~~--.

MOBILE

APARIMEfiTS
ron R E' "

:J

3 .br. house at 2105 North
Main St. no pets. $425.00+
dep. 304-675-2749

AM
..

r

rl'll16t-"""_ _ _ __,

HousEHoi.D
Gooos
1'---oliiiiiiiliio-_.1

6803

1

Lars &amp;
ACIID\GE

Trailer space for rent. 5125
per month, plus depos it.
Priest's Trailer Park. Water
i i .iCall
i i740
i i448
la
•3644
id

-.mydallysentlnel.com

Man who can't say words
writes his Valentine

•

10 &amp; t 2 wide portable ~rll
bulldlngo, avallabtotn 9' lhru
21' metal aide &amp; roof, 6'•6'6"
mini roll-up door; 40x64x13'
shop building, 1-3 entry, 3·
12x12 overheads gutter
painted steel sides &amp; roof,
insulated roof, erected price
$20,106.00;
30x40x9'4"
garage, 3·10xS lnsul over·
heads, ~ ·3' entry, Insulated
roof guner, 1' overhang
painted steel aides &amp; root,
erected,
$10,l57.00;
24x42x9'4• garage, 1·3'
entry, 2-20x8' lnsut over·
heads, insul root, painted
steel sides &amp; root 1' overhang gutter, erec1od priCe
$9967.00; Precision Post

14, 2003

WRITESEL

*ROOFING
*HOME

, rwm1111cE
*SEI.MlESS
I I mER
I
.

ROBERT
BISSELL

COISOIOTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

*fnl Elll•llth

140-992·1811

948·1405

Stop &amp; Compare

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I"N P£R~CT V~LENTt~E,

200'3:

• Room Addltlona &amp;

Remodeling
• New Garagaa
• Etoctrlcel &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; GuHere
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Deck•
Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Btu ~ll!iE .
BAD BREA~ .
PLUMP ilJmM'i,
H~IR~ ~E1.

'-IOTHINt:r LII\E A
CAniNE 1D RAISE
~ WOrMN'~

5rANORRO&gt; . . .

"' 'l? I!?
&lt;:&gt;/ . ~--­

0
0

"4 .fllif""'"" \1,\\

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

[I)

~
~

~ ~....._n--.,.,.~-r-P--v----'Y-........"""\
I

I~~~~~~
it=;:~

ald~lcf§_~

~~
PEOPt..e !lE'eK Ml! OUf
FOil FINANCIAL. A17VICE

=
s

..,-:7.~

l~E N..Wf\~ &amp;.UEVEO"'l
lfol C.OifoiC:&gt; Fllt~T Cl.A~
N.J.. 'if\£ 'N/&gt;.."i I

~
c

=

~ ~-=

...

Ti\1\'i':li!:IC.f\T· ~

DroVt: P\foltCt:
G.f!.r:.N'\ TIZ:UCK ! ·

�Friday, Februa,Y 14,2003

www.mydallysenUnel.com

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

... If you have a quutl• or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
\NINSJON

c;up

Wlud: Daytona 500
W-: Daytona International
Speedway. Daytona Beach,
Fla .• (2 .5 miles). 200 laps/
500 miles
Whon: Green flag drops at
12:30 p.m. Sunday
..... ,.... -~~~~rd Burton
Track quolltyln&amp; record: Bi II
Elliott, Ford, 210.364 mph,
Feb . 9, 1987
Race record: Buddy Baker,
Oldsmobile, 177.602 mph,
Feb. 17' 1980
MOlt recent race: Dale Earnhardt Jr. won the Budweiser
Shootout, the first of two un·
official all-star events on the
Cup schedule . II was Ju·
nior's first victory in a race
his father won six times. Jeff

• ·

Sfoi&lt;I12S

·

Gordon, like Earnhardt in a
Chevrolet, finished second,
followed by Matt Kenseth In
a Ford . Earnhardt got draft·
ing help from Dodge driver
Ryan Newman on the 66th
of 70 laps, and he used the
boost to shoot past four·
time Winston Cup champion
Gordon. Positions four, five
and six all went to Dodges,
driven In order by Newman,
Ward Burton and Ken
Schrader. "If you stay in the
same lane for too long, you
lose momentum," Earnhardt
Jr. said. "I could kind of see
what was going on behind
me and time things based
on what some of the other
guys were doing back there."

·

· CIIAHSMAN rHUCK

•

What: Koolerz 300
Where: Daytona lntemational
Speedway, Daytona Beach,
Fla., (2.5 miles), 120
laps/ 300 miles
When: 12:30 p.m. Saturday
Laot year'o winner: Dale
Earnhardt Jr.
Track quellfylftl record: Tommy
Houston ,
Buick,
194.389 mph, Feb . 10,
1987
Race record: Geoffrey Bod·
ine, Pontiac, 157.137 mph,
Feb. 16, 1985
Molt recent race: Scott
Wimmer won the Ford 300
at Homestead, Fla .. to end
the 2002 season. Greg Bif·
fie easily won hi s first
Busch Series title.

What: Florida Dodge Dealers

250
Where: Daytona International
Speedway, Daytona Beach,
Fla., (2.5 miles), 100
laps/250 miles
Whon: 1 p.m. Friday
Loot year's winner: Robert
Pressley
.
Track quallf)'lne record: Joe
Ruttman, Dodge, 187.563
mph, Feb. 16, 2000
Race record: Robert Press·
ley, Dodge, 140.121 mph,
Feb. 15, 2002
Moot recent race: Ron Hornaday Jr. won the Ford 200 at
Homestead, Fla ., to end the
2002 season, and Mike Bliss
edged Rick Crawford and Ted
Musgrave tor the title.

FEUI&gt; Of 'fHf WHK

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

v

DALE EARNHARDT jR., WINSTON CuP SERIES

E
R

s

N ·roP ALREADY
Earnhardt ]r. starts off season with victory in Budweiser Shootout
Dale Earnhardt Jr. celebrates In victory
lane lifter wlnnlnl Saturday nl&amp;ht's
Budweiser Shootout at Daytona
International Speedway. It
was Junior's ftrst win
In the alktar race.
John Clark/NASCAR This Week

JR. Rlckv Budd
IUicll 5111111

· 471

L

4,919

a.

Grec Bll!!e
Jason Keller

,J, Scott Wlmmer
4. M!ka Mcl.ayclllin
I, Jack SD1'81!ut
1. Jamie McMurray
L Kennv W8118C!!
I. Bobby Hamilton Jr.
t. Stacy ComD!on
10, Scott Riggs

CIWTIMAN TRUCK .
1. Mike Bliss
Rick Crawford
3. Ted Mwsarave
4, Jason Leffler
IS, oav!d Starr
8. Dennis Setzer
1. RC!bert Presslev
I. Ierrv Cook
t, Travis KvaDil
10. cw Gibbs
2.

·264
·431
· 666
. 713
· 112

· 841
· 861
• 877

·896
3,359
. 46
• 51
·203
. 215

. 227
·262

·289
· 320

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

D

AYTONA BEACH, Fla.- Dale Earn·
hardt Jr. keeps chipping away at his
father's legacy.
In Saturday night's Budweiser Shootout,
Junior demonstrated once again his mastery
of Daytona International Speedway, the stO:
ried track where Dale Earnhardt was most famous. The elder Earnhardt won the Shootout
- once known as the Busch Clash - six times.
The son's victory was lent more significance,
of course, by the sad fact that Daytona is
where his father was killed on Feb. 18, 2001.
After starting 19th in the all-star field,
Earnhardt Jr. needed only 16laps to take
the lead for the first time.
"When you come out of the pits with 19
laps to go, you just throw everything out
and just try your best to get to the front,"
Earnhardt Jr. said. "There are things that
happen out there that only the drivers un·
derstand. It's something we can't describe, and it's something that no one else
can understand, no matter how much you
study the races. We all just know when to
bump and when to push.... Sometimes you
know when and how to do it, but I can't ex·
plain it. There's just a time when it's tasteful
and times when it's not tasteful."
Despite the fact that much of his knack for
Daytona is instinctive, Earnhardt said he never
took overt lessons from his father.
"I watched him real close," Earnhardt
Jr. recalled. "I learned a lot about
how to drive race cars by watching him, and I was probably
watching more than he knew or
anybody knew. I had a lot of
practice just trying to think
about 'Man, how did he lose that
race?' or 'How did he win that
race?' or 'Why did the car do that?'
"Now that I'm driving, I'm running into all these situations and understanding certain things that I've
seen over the years. He was really, really
good at running at this track. I always just
thought it was a mind thing. But, of course,
you've got to have a good car."
The obvious question: What about the 500,
which Dale Earnhardt won only once?
· "I'm not comfortable being the favorite,"
Earnhardt Jr. said. "I like being the surprise,
you know, sneak up on people. I guess it's been
that way all my life. Being the favorite (for
the Shootout and the Daytona 500) is not a
good feeling for me. I feel like I don't want to
do anything to jinx myself. Somebody came
up and said, 'You're the favorite . I'm betting
on you.' That's a lot of pressure on me!"
Contact Monte Dutton at tug50@aol.com .

. 349

E•••

''
••

Dale

u

Earnhardt

s

Jr.

Rusty
Wallace

Wallace may be Dale Earnhardt's
father's old running mate. but Junior
was more than a little hot under the
collar when Wallace refused to coop.
erate in the Budweiser Shootout
draft. Earnhardt won anyway and
said, if Rusty had helped him , ' he
would have finished second."
NASCAR Thlo Week 'a Monte
Dutton &amp;Jveo his take: "The answer
to this puzzle is plastered all over
both cars. One beer sponsors Earnhardt; the other sponsors Wallace.
Wallace could probably envision
Miller's executives screaming:
'What's he doing? He's helping the
competition!' If so, he was right. The
racing gets more and more compli·
cated as it gets more and more commercial.~

YOUR TURN
LETIERS FROM OUR READEHS

Don't stop there
I congratulate you for having the
guts to criticize NASCAR officials
when they deserve it. Being 74 years
old and around racing for a long
time, this group seems to be follow·
lng in the footsteps of the almighty
AM and USAC In self-destruction, so
keep hammering these guys.
Yin Lucu
F'&lt;!rl Clyde, Meine
Some fans m·ight not know that
Indy-car racing was run by the AAA
(American Automobile Association)
Into the 1950s. USAC (United States
Auto Club) sanctioned the racing at all
the open-wheel tracks until the 1980s
and still runs

a

number of papular

open-wheel series.
We try to give credit where credit
is due, but ' NASCAR This Week' Is an
independent product. We take pride in
calling it the way we see n.

.,. A new NASCAR-flavored (pun intended) cookbook is out, with pro·
ceeds earmarked to benefit the
Hendrick Marrow Program. "Fast
Food: Fueling the Guys In the
NASCAR Winston Cup Garage" In·
eludes such items as NASCAR President Mike Helton's Fantastically
Fried Bologna Sandwich, Linda Hen·
drick's Shepherd's Pie, Katie
Kenseth's Oatmeal Waffle, Kim
Labonte's Texas-style Chicken-fried
Steak with Pan Gravy, and Martha
Nemechek's Sour-cream Chocolate
Squares. The cookbook retails' for
$19.95 and can be purchased at
www.hendrlckmotorsports.com or by
calling, toll·free,(877) 467-4890.
IJo Tickets are still available for this
weekend's Speedweeks events at
Daytona In ternational Speedway.
Two-day ticket packages for the Daytona 500 and Koolerz 300 Busch
Series season opener are available
dnline at daytonalnternatlonalspeedway.com. Prices are $175, $220
and $245 . For $185, there's also a
package that includes pre-race ac·
cess to pit road before Saturday's
race. Call(386) 253-7223.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="475">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9923">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="19046">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="19045">
              <text>February 14, 2003</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3717">
      <name>lantz</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="175">
      <name>putman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1073">
      <name>riggs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
