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Monday, Jan. 21, ~

Pomeroy,lllddl1port, Ohio

PllgeA10• TIMI Dlllly S1 1111..

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Tomadoes conquer-Vikings, 81

Is King James the next Jordan? Phil Mickleson gets!

•

off to a go 0 d sta rt·~

Pro scouts and college the ball. "It's KOary, but he can
coaches drool over James· get better," joyce said.
•~
potential, and even the kid
James, ~ho has grown an
•
with the " King James" tattoo inch ·in the J.ast six months
LA QUINTA, Calif. (AP) _ During his five-month break
on his right biceps knows he's and probably isn't done, ha$
from the PGA Tour, Phil Mickelson wanted to get stronger,
got game.
taken all the talk about his
ker with his swing a bit, and polish up his short:;
So, does he think he's the game in stride. Those closest
game.
. •
best high school player in the to him say he hasn't let the
He returned to the tour with a victory his=.
nation?
accolades swell his head and
first time out since August, winning the Bob:
''J'm. up there,'' James said. can handle the pressure.
.
Hope Classic on the first hole of a playoff with~
"I'm near the top, if not at the
He's a high school ki4 like
David Berganio 00 Sunday.
top. I know I can play with any other, whether flirting
Taking his 20th tour title, Mickelson birdied the final three
the best. I'm not being cocky, with girls. playing video
holes of regulation for an 8-ilnder 64 and 30-under total, then
but when I'm on my game, I games, listening to Jay-Z's latbirdied No. 18 again in the playoff after Berganio hit his sec- ·
don't think there's aaybody in est CD or cramming for
ond shot into the water in front of the green on the par 5 .
the country who can stop me. semester final~.
Mickelson was very pleased with his game over the five days
"It's great to hear people
"Sometimes, it's hard,'' he
of the Hope.
·
say I can pass like Magic ..nd said. "I'm under a super
"I think that this is a year that I've been very much looking
score like Kobe," he said, microscope. But I've got my , forward to, that I've worked hard for. I feel like my game has
referring to Magic Johnson friends to keep me cool and I ~ slowly evolved to get where it is today," said Mickelson, beginand Kobe Bryant. "And they know I can rely on them.&amp;
ning his 1Oth full season on the tour. "I specifically set out to
say I jump like Michael did. long as you got friends,
get proficient from 120, 130 yards in. ·
.
That's nice, but to be the best you've got nothing to worry
"That's why I'm' so excited to have won the tournament,
I have to keep working at it." about."
because what 1 specifically set out to work on paid off this ,
James -wins over new con-. Following his breakout
week."
verts every time he takes the performances this summer,
Mickelson! short game paid off big late in the tournament.
floor and delivers one of his James talked about chalH
·
u1a r flop shot fro rna b ad 1ieonthe fr mgeto
'
. emad easpectac
no-look passes, soars for lenging the NBA's rule~
set up his birdie on the final hole of regulation, then hii a
another vicious dunk or shuts prohibiting underclassmen
wed ge fro m 80 yards to within inches of the pin on h is third
down the other team's best' from declaring themselves
shot of the playoff.
player.
eligible for the draft. The
Berganio had dropped and hit his fourth shot within 8 feet
Through his first 11 games, millions he could make
f....
·
o me cup, 1eaving
him a chance for par, but Mic ke1son h ad
James is averaging 29.5 were tempting.
·to only tap-in for his birdie and the $720,000 winner's check.
points, 8.6 rebounds, 5 .5
He changed his mind,
"You can't count Phit.:.ut because of his short game, and he ,
assists and dozens of gasps though, and said he still hasknew exactly what he was doing and he did it. He's a great .
from onlookers.
· n 't ruled out going to colplayer, obviously, and h~ showed it right there," Berganio 'said. ',
He recently scored a lege. His list of schools has
Berganio, who shot a closing 66 to force the playoff, got.
career-high 43 points ·with gotten ·shorter: North Car$432,000 for his highest finish· ever.
.
nine rebounds and "ight olina, . Duke. Louisville,
, :talking about his costly second shot, a 4-iron, on the play- .
assists on Detroit's Dion Har- Ohio State and Flo.rida.
· trying to hit a hard cut on the
o fJ' h o1e, B erganio said, "I was
ris. Harris, a prep superstar
"I don't know," he said.
~t portion of the green and I just chunked it."
.
himself, is convinced there's "College is something I
' Mickelson, who took time off to be with liis wife for the
no one better.
think about a lot. It's hard to
birth of their second child in October then also skipped the
"LeBron knows the game predict. I'll make up my
fiut two tournaments this year, wasn't surprised he was able
and he 's so big and strong mind on that one down the
to win his first time back.
'
.
no high school player can road. I'm having a lot of fun
"I t ,s on Iy b een fitve· month s. Its
• not t h at Iong. I've:;'
defend him,'' Harris said.
right now." .
. .
played golf for 29, 30 years, so it's not like I'm going 19,.•
Although tough to spot,
Next year, the decisions
fi
h
"h
d
Ja s does have some on will get tougher for him.
orget ow, e sai ·
.
me
Mickelson won twice last year, was second behind Tiger:
court deficiencies. His freeNBA ,or college? Nike or
Wopds on the money list, and .finished in the top i 0 in~
throw shooting could be bet- .Adidas? ·
·
his1£nal three events of the season before taking his
ter, and there are times he
But those can wait. For
break.
appears to lose interest and now, he's enjoying the ride.
He was gratified to win his 20th tt' tle, a mt'le.s tone
coasts.
"This is easy," James said.
reached by just 33 others.
His coach, Dru Joyce, says "I've got nothing to worry' .
"To have won 2 times, and to play golf, which is what
James has to work at what he about as long as I keep havdoes when he doesn't have ing fun ."
most people do on vacation, as my job is great," he said.
·
Bfiny Baird and Cameron Beckman tied fqr third at 28
under. Jerry Kelly, who won a week earlier in Hawaii, was fifth·
at 27 under.jay Haas, the 1988 Hope champion who had been;'
in o{ near the lead much of this week, had a 7 4 to finish six
strok~ back at 336.
"
Mickelson took the Hope lead for first time when he rolled,:
in a 30-foot birdie putt on No. 17 to go to 7 under for the day,:
and 29 under for the tournament.
Berganio's round included an eagle at No. 11 that started him
on his way to a 31 on the last nine holes of regulation.
MELBOURNE, Australia . Spaniard Albert Costa with an 0, 6-3 win over No. 12 Elena ond as her ground strokes
While the second-place finish was the best of his career,.
started to drop a fraction
(AP) - Tommy Haas came overhead smash after 4 hours, Dementieva.
Bellfanio tied for third last year in the Greater Hartford Open
Mauresmo and Henin's beyond the lines.
close to becoming the latest 10 minutes to advance to his
- two strokes behind the winning Mickelson.
•
1
top seed to be upset in the · first Grand Slam quarterfinal fourth-round matches were
Australian Open.
since 1994. In ti).e next round, disrupted by rain until the
Haas; the No. 7 seed, sur- he'll play the winner of Mon- roolil .were closed on center
vived a match point and then day's last match between No. 8 court and Vodafone Arena.
angled a backhand volley ,Pete Sampras and No.9 Marat Matches on outside courts
were postponed to Tuesday as
c:n»SCOUrt to beat Switzerland's Safin.
Roger Federer 7-6 (3), 4-6, 3- . Ferreira, who served for the rain persisted in Melboqme.
6, 6-4, 8-6 on Monday and match in the fourth set before
The top-ranked Capriati
advance to . the quarterfinals losing it in a tiebreaker, wasted three match points
against Marcelo Rios.
dropped to his knees and then against Rita Grande, including
Haas remained the highest- ran around the court waving two during a tiebreaker in .
which 10 of the last 11 points
ranked .men's player at Mel- his arm in celebration. 1
bourne Park when he sealed · Ferreira has won five of his went against serve, before
the fourth-round ~n in 3 11 matches with Sampras, but clinching a 6-3 7-6 (9) win
hours, 35 minutes.
is 0-2 against Safin.
when the Italian faulted.
He took the first-set
Sampras, a 13-time Grand
The 25-year-old American
· tiebreaker when Federer put a Slam titlist, and Safin, the 2000 · could sympathize. She netted a
forehand wide, but dropped U.S. Open winner, are the only routine backhand volley on
serve in the ninth game of the two of those remaining in the her second match point, at 7-6
ill the tiebreaker, and gave an
second and the 20-yeat-old draw who've won a major.
Federer tied it at a .set apiece
On the women's side, incredulous laugh before
on two aces.
defending champion Jennifer bendin~~; at the hips.
She cracked a backhand
Federer pulled ahead 2-1 Capriati moved into the quarafter trading breaks late in the terfinals against No. 7 Amelie return down the line to set up
third and winning it on Haas' Mauresrrto, while No. 4 Kim another match point at 9-8, a
serve with an inside-out fore- Clijsters needed just 45 min- shot that seemed to force
hand that the German utes to beat Janette Husarova Grande, seeded 20th, into subdumped into the net. Haas 6-0, 6-2 and adance to a quar- mission.
Mauresmo, a finalist here in
' "
broke in the fifth game of the terfinal against fellow· Belgian
1999, had some anxious
fourth set and tied it at two sets Justine Henin.
moments
in a· 6-0, · 4-6, 7-5 ·
when Federer netted a backClijsters, who made the
hand after retilrning a big serve French Open final after beat- win· over unseeded Marlene
and chasing down a forehand. ing Henin in the semifinals at Weingartner.
The seventh-seeded MauThe fifth went with ~erve Roland Garms, said she aggraun.til Federer, after missing a vated an elbow injury and resmo raced through the first
match point on Haas' serve at withdrew from doubles to set in 19 minutes and then didn't win a point in two games as
5-6 and 30-40, made five con- focus on singles. ·
she
slumped to 1-3 in the secsecutive errors. Haas went
Henin, seeded sixth, had a 6ahead 7-6 when Federer's
crosscourt backhand went
wide, and he served it out in
the next game.
A resurgent Rios had a 7-5,
6-1, 6-4 win over Nicolas
· Lapentti of Ecuador.
Rios, who created a stir by
describing the depth in the
women's as a 'joke" after his
third-round win over Alberto
Martin, converted six of his
seven break points and shut
down Lapentti with his consis.
tent serve.
Rios sealed the match when
'
Lapentti, seeded 23rd, sent a
forehand long.
.
. Wayne Ferreira sealed a 4-ti',
.
6-4, 6-4,6-7 (4)~ 9-7 win over

AKRON, Ohio (AP) James already writes a
Grown mm dutcbing busi- mont~ly column for Slam
nm cards, little kids seeking Magazine, and the Cleveland
an autotnJ~b, 1V crewJ and Plain Dealer runs "The James
throngs
of Journal:' a weekly update on
coaches, scouts his "life and times."
and recruiters
NBC's
"Today" show
all come to see · recently told the school it
him play.
would be visiting. and the
LeBron James packs them high school's athletic director,
in everywhere he goes. ·
Frank Jes·.;e, fields dozens of
And right now everyone, or phone calls each week about
so it seems, wants a piece of james.
James, the na.ion's best high "He's certainly a once-inschool basketball player - . a-generation player around
and perhaps the NBA's next here," said Jessie, a former
big name.
assistant coach for Cinc.in''He's better than Magic or nati's Bob Huggins. "I usually
Michael," raved on.e of the low-key it. But he's probably
8,500. fans who watched the best high school player
last weekend at Cleve- out of Ohio since Jerry Lucas.
and State's Convocation He's a very special kid."
Center.
Hype? Hatdly.
"Unselfish. ·He's
very
By the time he graduates in
impressive:• said Hall of Fame 2003, James probably will
executive Wayne Embry after have won his third straight
seeingJames for the first time. Ohio Mt. Basketball tide And what does Michael last year he became the first
. Jordan himself think?
sophomore to win the award
"He's very talented." said - and perhaps four straight
Jordan, who summon~d state championships. He's still
Jam es to Chicago for a work- not sure ifhe'll play in college
out last summer. "But be's or try to jump directly to the
young, and there's a lot of NBA.
things he doesn't know." ·
Last June, he was the first
Never heard of James? underclassman invited to
Don't worry. you will.
USA Basketball's DevelopNike, Reebok and Adidas ment Festival in Colorado
already are . eager to sig~t Springs. He promptly broke
endorsement deals with the the event's scoring record and
17-year-old junior, a 6-foot- was named MVP.
7, 225-pound phenom . for
He played briefly with JorAkron's nationally ranked St. dan, Tracy McGrady and
Vincent-St. Mary High other NBA players while in
School.
Chicago for another tournaJames is being called every- ment, and capped his summer
thing from the-next jordan to by winnin
_ g MVP honors at
the greatest player in high Adidas'
invitation-only
school history.Andb
f
ABCD
Camp
·n New Jersey.
'
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·
ecause 0
his popularity, his school
"There wasn't anyone close
moved its home games this to him," said Steven Culp, an
season to the University of assistant coach at the high
Akron's Rhodes Arena, where school. . "Two NBA scouts
it sold season-ticket packages told me he's better than any
for $125 and the Fighting player nor'in the NBA right '
Irish draw nearly 4,000 a now, including Europe. He's
the best."
game.

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31·

tin-"

Prep

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Hometown Newspaper

PGA

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Ul

What's .Inside

" lames

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,At Pleasant Valley Hospi ..~a·---'"'
little things matter.

I~SPECTIO~

SHAVER REPAIR

t

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CLINIC.

TOESDAI JAnUARY 2Znd Z:J0-4:00 PM
FRUTH PHARMACY
786 N. 2nd, Middleport

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Details, A3

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House·ra;ing.in Tuppers Plains

1

More than 70 volwiteers came ·together in Tuppers Plains
last weekend to I:Jelp rebuild the .home of Eastern Basketball Coach Howie Caldwell, which was destroyed during a
fire two days before Christmas . .Tim Baum, coordinator of
the rebuilding project, said 70 percent of the work on the
new home has JJeen completed and the entire project
should be finished in two weeks. (Dave Harris)
;

Hl&amp;h: 501, Low: 501
Details, A2

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Haas survives against Federer; Ca~riati,
Henin, Mauresmo and .Rios all ac vance

FHEE

Delberta Johnson, 80
Clara Powell, 89
Maxine Aldridge, 73

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

•

304-675-4340

Romuno.receives
Bush ·pays tribute to.King program award
MLK DAY CELEBRATION

Bush visits
W. Vii'Jinia

WASHINGTON (AP)
-. President Bush is using
a visit to West Virginia to
build support for taX-cut,
BY ScOTT IJNDLAW
daughter, the Rev. Bernice King, presented
trade and energy policies
ASSOCIATED ~~ WRITER
Bush with a portrait of the slain civil rights
he says would create jobs
W,A.SHINGT9,N (~P) -::- Preside
. nt Bush leader.
but which are stalled in ' . 11..
.ru at~n
· L.l!t•i.er:~
"' ;.aliLJ
· M.OPda
;~.onq,~~"'."'
, •. · l ~n
• YbY . ."I. can't waiH\il.hang it:' Bush s.aid.
.
the Democratic-'t:OII.trolled "
h
·,;r """" .(..d ..rol &lt;c.h 1
Seri?ite:"""'' • "·~··'"""''""'""
ann':'uncmg t f!fff~91)•~~wr:~ .- .. -~inated in 1968 at ag~ · 39, King would
arships_ encoufl!Sln~ yo~iig peopl~ tb stui:ly · have turned 73 last Tuesday.
Bush on Tuesday was
educatton and pubh~ P,?licy. .
.
The King scholarships will go to "promising
touring a Charleston heavy
Bush, who has sa1d educatton IS the great students all across America" Bush said in the
machinery distributor, · the
'vii
· hts tssue
·
'
Cl
ng
o f our tt'me," use d th ~ Ki n g East Room to a crowd of some
200· adminisCecil I. Walker Machinery
holiday to renew his emphasis on improving tra"on officials foreign ;mbassadors and civil
Co., which sells and services
·
·
als o sat'd It
· will 'ghts
"' leaders. '
sch ooJs. The admi rustratton
Caterpillar equipment in
·
'
,
.,
d
raJ
fu
di
fi
11
n
propose mcreasmg te e
n ng or co eges
Starting this summer the Martin Luther
d
·
··
h
d' · all
'bJ k
'
coal- dependent West Vir. .
I
ft
and un. tvers_mes dt at trab 1$~~ illy. attract ac King Jr. Scholars Program will take as many as
gmta. n an a ernoon
H
·r..,
speech, Bush was outlining
an
tsparuc stu ents y
m ton over cur- 10 outstanding undergraduate and graduate
rent levels.
~
d
d
k h
·d · · ·
· h
"how our economic policies
Th
'd
. dd d al
f stu ents an rna e t em pa1 mterns m t e
ong as a quartet o
ffi
f h
. h Ed
·
.
e pres1 ent no e
affeCt real people who either
d
.c..... ..,
S th
U :
.
.
o ce o t e secretary at t e
ucat1on
Wh'
ffi ·a1 'd
ents uum .exas ou ern ruvemty rectiare unemployed looking to. stu
d Ki ng,s "I H ave . a D ream .. speech . K'mg •s Department,
tte· House o tct s sa1 .
e
10
widow, his son, Martin Luther King III, and
PIHH He Kine. AJ
get back into work .orce, or
who are hanging on to their
jobs concerned they might
lose them,'' said Claire
Buchan, a White House
spokeswoman.

POMEROY - Dan Romuno of Meigs Local School
District
recognized recendy by the Ohio Freemasons as
;th.e
Drug-free. S.~hool Coordinator in Ohio.
Annual Ohio Prevention ·ana · E(lucation
Conference in Columbus, he received a
certificate of excellence and a check for
$3,000 in recognition of the positive role
he bas played in preventing substance
abuse among the students in his district.
Four regional winners were also recognized with Ohio Masonic Safe, DrugFree Schools Coordinator Awards and
individual checks for $750 or $375.
They included Doris Burkhart and
Romuno
Bobbie Herd of Big Walnut Local
Schools, Sunbury; Ron Kuceyeski of
Alliance Cily Schools; Cathy Mowry of Canfield Local
Schools; and Andy Zweizig of Upper Arlington Schools.
The Ohio Freemasons in conjunction with the Ohio
Department of Education's Safe, Drug-Free Schools (SDFS)
Office established the award to recognize SDFS coordinators who have demonstrated outstanding performance in
promoting "Safe, Drug-Free Schools" in Ohio.

~

ister boats
on ine with ODNR

OHIO
Pick 3: 1-Q-1 .
Plck4: 1-6+7

Buck. 5: 1·2·8·26-37
Pick 3 d.y: 8-4-1
Pick 4 day: 9-7..()-7 '

FROM STAFf REPORTS

W.VA.

Index
:Z Section - 11 . . . .

A5
82-4

BS
A5

. A4
A3
A3
81
A2

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POMEROY - Even though boating season is several
months away, residents of Meigs County are being reminded by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources
(ODNR) that they can begin renewing their boat registra.
tions through an easy online registration system.
"This online registration system is Governor Taft's goal to
expand electronic business services provided by the state
government,'' said ODNR Di.rector Sam Speck. " It is a definite convenience for Ohio boaters."
Last year, the ODNR Division of initiated the online
boat registration system to improve customer service and
satisfaction. The system can be utilized 24 hours a day
through June 30 by visiting the ODNR web site at
w.Nw.ohiodnr.com
Approximately 130,000 renewal notices are d'lte to arrive
this month in the mailb.oxes of watercraft owners across the
state whose current registrations will expire on March 1.

o.lly 3: 3·4-1
Dally 4: 7..()-7-1
.
casli 25: 2-3-6-19-21·25

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

FROM STAFf REPORTS

SNOW DRAGON- Tiffany Gorslene, 11, and Cheyenne Gorslene. 5, of Rutland put the

finishing touches on their •snow dragon,· which they made with their father, Wes. Children throughout Meigs County &lt;:9uld be found making snowmen or sleigh riding on Monday following the snow storm t~at occurred over the weekend. (Tony M. Leach) ,

Pl.... sH ODNR. AJ .

c 2002 Ohio Valley 1'\lblisllina Co.

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Ohio

The Daily Sentinel·

~nlldey,Jin.23

BY•·-~

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Ohio is building a new snowplow blade
and testing truck tracking devices to help
keep highways free of ice and snow.
State transportation officials also have
designed their own version of a device
that measures friction on the highways to
avoid unnecessary- use of road salt. In
addition,. they have expanded statewide
the use of saltwater to pretreat roads.
"We're trying to.bring new technology
into the equipment," said Mary Ellen
Kimberlin, assistant director of highway
management for the Ohio Department of
Transportation. "We're concentrating on
when to do the right thing 'to thP. pavement to get the best benefit."
The first two redesigned plow blades
are expected to be road-tested this

l:arllil •

_•I eo~u-.. 1W111' I

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Sunny Pt Cloudy

Cloud¥

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RMI

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Srow

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More ·like spring on Wednesday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It will seem more like April
than January across the region
on Wednesday, with showers
and temperatures approaching
60 degrees, the · National
Weather Service said.
The rain will develop Tuesday night and spread across
the area on Wednesday. ·
Temperatures
overnight
will hover around 40, forecasters said.
Drier air will return to the
state on Thursday, along with
more seasonal temperatures in
the 30s.
.Sunset tonight will · be at
5:38, and sunrise on Wednesday is .at 7:48 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Becoming
cloudy. Occasional rain developing. lows in the lower 40s,
South wind around 1Q mph.

Cha.nce of rain 80 percent.
Wednesday... Occasional rain. Highs in the upper 50s.
Southwest wind 15 to 20
mph. Chance t&gt;f rain 80 percent.
Wednesday night... Occasional rain. lows near 50.
Extended £precast:
Thursday... Occasional rain.
Highs in the lower 50s.
Thursday night. __ Showers
likely. Lows near 30.
H tg
· hs
Fn·day... Cl eanng.
near 50_
Saiurday... Mostly
clear.
Lows in the upper 20s and
highs in .the mid 50s.
Sunday... Mostly clear. lows
in the lower 30s and highs in
the mid 50s.
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 30s and
highs near 50.

COOLVILLE- Delberta Johnson, 80, Coolville, died Sun·
•., day, Jan. 20,2002, at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital,Ath1111.
Born July 20, 1921, she was the daughter of the late Austin
. and M~t Buckley Blake, md is survived by a bmther and
. a Slster-m-law, Delmont and Pat Blake; and several nieces md
nephews.
__ . ~Graveside services were held at 1'p.m. today, Tuesday, Jan. 22,
_ 002, at Coolville Cemetery. Arrangements are by White
· •·
neral Home, Coolville.
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_
Meigs
County
court
.news
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\Voman held in I-I.J5 death

, ,:

co~ fur the drawing Monday, so no one can claim.the Ohio
Lo~ g:ames top prize ofS1oo.ooo.
Buckeye 5 sales amounted to $258,503.Wmners will share $78,140.
'Jhen, \'I'm: 77 Buckey!: 5 ticketS with fuur of the numbers, and
each is v.llrth $250. The 2,918 tickets showing three of the numbers
=each m&gt;rth $10,and the 29,710 tickets showing tv.u of the numbers are each worth $1 .
The Ohio Lottery will pay out $628,007 to winnen in Monday
nights Pick 3 Numbers daily game, and sales totaled $750,169.50.

U..-.1.1 ~

-J'

•J-~ r--•ID

silas

Gov.Bo:Jafi

a

GeT! lind

Marine.expected to

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio's cadre of government
Wlltchdogs -: activist groups
that comb budgets and cam_.
paign finances for hints of waste
or ethks violations - is dwindling.
Directors and leaders of many
of the state's most vocal government-watching gmups have
stepped down over the past year.
1\vo longtime critics of government spend\ng announced
their departure'! in the last two
weeks. Donald C. Berno is leaving the Ohio Public Expendi' ture Council after 13 years, and
Scott A. Pullins stepped down as
president of the Ohio Taxpayers
Union.
Common Cause-Ohio was
once one of the most active
groups, but it has· been without
a director for months. Both Ray
Cadwallader and his predecessor, Janet lewis, have left.
Ohio Citizen Action, likewise,

lost Laura Yeomans u retearch
director Jut summer. Yeomam
used her computer to track
campaign cpntributions and
spending by state and local
politicians.
States need private groups to
keep an eye on government
spending and ethics, said Meleah
Rush, ditector of state projects
for the Center for Public
Integrity in Washington. She cowrote a report, "Watchdogs on
Short Leashes:' issued by the
center in December.
"The value is, teally, that these
third-party groups aren't physically involved in government;'
Rush said. "Some watchdogs in
government felt their budgets
were threatened by the · work
they did.
"We don't have those constraints. We can be as critical as
we need to be as long as we
show both sides."
Ohio is one of 27 states with

Tell S0meone You Love Them
.
rn A Special Way .

·no outside agency overseeing
ethical conduct by state lawmakers, according to Rush's
study.
.
The groups remaining are all
public bodies 1on the state pay·
mll.
Ohio Inspector · General
Thomas Charles investigates
allegations of wrongdoing in
state executive agencies, while
his counterpart, Legislative
Inspector
General James
Rogen, watches the General
Assembly.
The Ohio Ethics Commission and the Ohio Elections
Commission respond to and ·
investigate complaints.
·
Ohio Consumers' Counsel
Robert S. Tongren represents
residential utility consumers in
complaintS to the Public l/tili- ·
ties Commission of Ohio; he
sometimes takes on
utilities
themselves. Most ·negotiations
are behind dosed doors.

·

OF WEIGHT
•
TO CARRY
ON YOUR
SHOULDERS.

CINCINN ATI (AP)
City officials are trying to
shore up Cincinnati's convention business, threatened
by a boycott called by
activis!s after the police
shooting of an unarmed
black man sparked - riots in
Ap+il.
Letters :1re ~o ing out to the
1 21
l~lp:) 'chedult'd tu

ure to connol;ThomasJ- Dau&amp;bet"!}: Alban}~ $55 and COIIS,'hnproper
~Michael S. Mol:le)l New
Lexington, $55 and COliS, inJ!&gt;IqJer
tagging; Diana L Roach, Little
Hocking. $30 and COliS, seat bell;
Donald ~ furtland, $35 and
=ts. ~ Myn L Cotton;
Ga11ip&gt;1is, $30 and COliS, speed;'Ilu:a
Boodtc; l'ornet'Cif, oostS onl)l !lix:
rnot1lh&lt; jail suspended to 12 dais.
tv.u years probation, attempted
decqlcion to oblain a ~
drug Bobbi ]. DiD. J.lornetO)I $30

Mom, Dod, Sllllt, oncl
. lrothlr...
Thonkll'or bti1191Uch
· a vreat famlyl
I Love You Very Muehl

21NCH AD ... $10.00
HaPw V.,_,dne's Dey

(APPROXIMATELY 40 WORDS) .

'CUpid's arrow Is
• str;sand true, ,
In brln
this thousht
toyou . .
I'm sorry about the
other night.
When we had that
. · terrible fight. ,

o·

love

message gives me the
opportunity to tell you

ADSMUSTBE
RECEIVED BY .
NOON,
FRIDAY, ..
FEBRUARY 8,
2002.

A Sentlnd love me5$a81!t
was a good Idea.
To show you.Just how
much I ~you, Marla.

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERFUL LIFE
TOGETHER I

just how much I love .
you and enjoy being
husband. I know
I sotnetlmes don't
show It but I
do.
Valentines

Write

Reader Services
Correction Polley

Message Below:

·

at (740) 992-2156.

Newe Departmenta

•-

The main number II 992·2158.

Depar1t'nent etdentiona ara:

Mail Your love Mes~age and Total A,mount Due To:

:The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court ~treel, Pomeroy; Ohio 4S769
Name:

618 EAST MAIN ST
POMEROY, OH 45769

.,

992-6674
HOURS: Mon-Frl 9 to 6
Sat 9·5

1

I

Size of Valentine:
Total Amount Enc.-;\-os-e-;-d:------.----------------------_;______
-.!of"

......

,.

~-- • "'! ·"- • !" • - •

·•

0

,'J e

a

a

:- • - • - • - • .- • - • - • - • - • -

a

a

a

a

a

a .

Gene,.. manag~r

Ext. 12

New•

Ex1. 13

or

Ext. 14

a

LANGSVILLE - Maxine Aldridge, 73, of Langsville, died
on Sunday, January 20,2002, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, West Virginia.
She was born on April 6, 1928, in Harlan County. Kentucky,
daughter of the late Charles EdWard and Gratus Luee Smith
Kelly:
·
She was a retired clerk for the Department of Human Services in Mason County. West Virginia, and was a member of the
First Southern Baptist Church in Pomeroy. She was a charter
member and served for 25 yean as secretary of the Order of
Eastern Star No.157.
undetage~ ., . . . Surviving are her husband, Charles W.Aldridge of Langsville;
a daughter and son-in-law, Gratus Ann and Hershel Marcum of
' Glenn L. . Mahomey, Sr., Huntington, West Virginia; a daughter and her timce, Jackie
Ungwi1le, S25 and oostS per count, Andenon and Bill Mallette of Point Pleasant, and a daughter,
two COIIIII! in!plllpet ~:~!!Bing. $50 Nancy Jo Aldridge of Pomeroy; two brothers and sisters-in-law,
COliS, three days jail ~ Gerald and Bonnie Kelly of Pomemy, and John H. and Anna ·
onr: year ptchitia~ one year hunt- Kelly of Madison, Indiana; and a·sister and bmther-in-law, Glo·
~ !l1.tlpetl!ion. hunling fiiih a ria Jean Johnson and Charles Tillford of Madison, Indiana.
IOOCDr ~ $50 and COliS, three
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death b her sister,
days jail suspended, one year piQba- Opal Marie Bpstick; and two brothers, Hugh Park Kelly and
tion, h~ without ·a ~; Charles E. Kelly.
Derrick s. w...m. The Jllaini. $21 , Services will be held at Fogelsong-1\:icker Funeral Home in ·
and COliS, speed; Kalhy Marcl!m. Mason, West Virginia, on Thursday, January: 24, 2002, at 1:30
Guysville, oostS oni)l fillure to }i:ld p.m., with the Rev. Lamar O'Bryant officiating. Burial will folIX! a pol* saity vrhide; GI3Ce M. low at Kirkland Memorial Gardens in Point Pleasant.
AndreY.II'ottles'Cif, $30 and COliS,
Friends may call at the fimeral home on Wednesday, Januacy
seat belt; Timothy J. Nel!On, 23, 2002, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
.
R.eedMlk; W) and COliS, three
Ot:der of Eastern Star services will be conducted on Wednesdays jail suspended, Q1e year proba- day, january 23, 2002, at 7 p.m,
tion, !10 '1'"""'"'"s liceme;Tt;IYetS .P.
Robideaux, Coolville, $30 ~
and his home was bombed.
•COStS, seat belt; Tanodly S. Pride"At a certain point even a
lll01e, Middleport. OO!IS on!}; no
strong man might have yieldplate light, oostS oni)l fictitious .._
$50 and oostS, pnsemi~ Ronnie
lnwnPIIpA1 ' ed. Dr. King never did, and he
never gave up on ·his counI.ambert,fumeto)l$50andCOIIS,¥J
They will take part. in sem- . try:• Bush said. "Some figures
days jai suspended to six, one eyar
inars
and programs on policy in history, renowned in their
probation, &lt;hug pll3phernalia. $50
and 00!1S, :lO days jail suspended to development, and work with day, grow smaller with the
six, one )"31' probation, p.Umc: inde- a mentor, said White House passing of time. The man
spokesman Taylor Gtoss.
from Adanta, -Georgia, only
CCIIC)IoostS onljldi!Ordedy conduct;
Bush
noted
that
President
grows larger with the years."
BrymA. Roberts, New Manhfield,
Bush's relationship' with
$95 and cad,takingroore !han one Lyndon B. Johnson had
antlered dt.er per year; Scott R. signed the Civil Rights Act of some civil rights groups have
Wolfe, Albany. $55 and COStS, 1964 in the same White been bumpy during his first
h1lplbper tl@ging S9S and COliS, House room, and had handed year in office.
NAACP leaders have comtaking roore !han two dt.er per year. the pen over to King. The act
·banned segregation in public · plained about Bush not
accommodations and paved meeting with . them, and it
the way for court action to did not appear they were.
end bias in hiring and pro- present Monday night. The
motions.
White House declined to
(liiP8 213o8110)
"The law marked a true release a list of · audience
Ohio Valley Pullllelttng Co. ·
'
turning
point in the life of members, but said represenPul&gt;lllhed OYOtY aften)oOn,
lhrough Friday, 111 Court St.,
our country,"- Bush sajd. tatives of the National
Pomoroy,
Ohio.
Second-clau
I)C)lMge paid at Pomeroy.
"There's no doubting that Council of Negro Women
llemlior: TI'MI AUoclated PIMI and
the law came as it did, when and the Leadership Council
the Ohio Noo- Au-.
it did, because. of him."
on Civil Rights were in the
addtlono to The Dally SanHnel,
111-Court.
The
president
·
Cited
the
East' Room. The NAACP's
St.. Pomeruv: 0t11o 45789.
indignities and injuries King Baltimore offices were closed
Subecrlptlon ratee
sustained
along the way. He on Monday and calls there
ly canter or motor route
One·
$2
· was beaten, stabbed, jailed, were not returned.
One month
18.70

m

King ·

-Y

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

One-

$10ol

Dolly
50 cents
8ublcribtro not -ring to pay the
cafTier may ram1t In advanco d - 1o
The Dally S.OHnel. CNdlt 'wlll bt given
carlltr
-h · No u-lptlon by
mall permitted
In .,... when! home
calllor HMoela IVIIIIbtt.

111!1----

Clrcul8tlon

Ex1. 4

Cla!"'ltled Ada

Ext. 5

Downing Chllda lnaurance Agency

1laY 'IIAMTl'D 'R) Dl)'ll
IF IYAM1'U t. "t, 5,
111 7 Y&amp;Al at.maY

va.auMTY... ·

R1JJlAND -· A Rutlandarea )OUth wz DJiured in a one-car
accident Moncby on County
Road 3 (New Uma), the GllliaMellsCou~
~ Pat of the Stlte ~¥waY
!'mol rqxxtai
RachdA.MOI'r6, 17,33251 Side
Hill Road, w.tS tranlpOrted to
POMEROY Meigs
Holzo- Medical Center l7t M~ County Recorder Judy King
EMS fiom the scene of the 7:58 · reported the following transfers
a.m aa:idrnt, the p:lllcl said
in real estate:
Troopets said Manis was northErma Janice Hampton to
bound, 1.5 miles north ofRudarxl - Richard D. Hampton, Marilyn
'JP.vnship Road 58 (Whire's Hill) D. Mercer, deed, Salem.
whenshelostOOtlllO!inalelirurve,
Douglas K. Campbell, Cheri
slid olf the lett side of the road and L. Campbell, to Bradford M.
struck an embankment
Anderson, Heidi M. Stimmel,
Thecarwzslighdydamaged.and deed, Columbia.
Morris was cited fix WJSaie speed.
Paul Simon, Paul P. Simon,
Allie Simon, Allie M . Simon, to
Robert E. Murphy, Mildred I.
Hudson, deed, Salisbury.
POMEROY - Units of .the
Clinton Robert Holsinger,
Meig!EnlergencyServiceans'Ml'ed deceased, · to Fpnces M.
10 Cllk b- assistance on Monday. Holsinger, affidavit, Olive.
Units responded as li&gt;lk:ms:
Charles R. Ransom, Bonnie
CENTRAL DISPATCH
J- Ransom, to Ohio Power Co.,
5:28 .a.rn, Cole Slreet, leland ' right of way. Letart.
BIOI'JJI, Holzer Medical Center:
Daniel W Bias, Martha Bias,
10:21 a.~, Flm Slreet, oj,.J to Ohio Power Co., right of
C\11llfllim, Pl=mtValley Hn&lt;pitd; way, Salem.
11:54 a.m, HMC Oinic, TerCecil E. Johnston, Rebecca].
r:mce Givens, refused treannent;
Johnston, to Ohio Power Co.,
1:47 p.rn, CMrbrook Nursing right of way, Salem. .
Center,MatgretBucldey,PVH;
Robert Black, Wthila J8:Z7 p.rn, UnionAvmue,Debra Black, to Columbus Sou then
Dailey, PVH.
Power, right of way, lebanon.
RACINE
Joseph A. Wolfe, Betty Ann
2:44 p.rn,Vine Slreet, Bill Fird- Wolfe, to Ohio Power Co.,
enbinder, HMC;
right of way, Sutton.
6:21 p.m., Ohio 124, motor
Steve R . Dailey, Rhonda L
vehicle acciden~ Ttacy Patterson, Dailey, to Ohio Power Co.,
treated, James Patterson, Cabell right of way. Sutton.
Huntington Hn&lt;pital.
Michael R . Swiger, Lura R.
ruJILANI)
.
Swiger, to Ohio Power Co.,
8:01 a.rn, New Lima Road, right of way, Sutton.
_
motor \liliicle accident:. Rachael
David l. Weber, Debor.ih S.
Motris, HMC;
Weber, to Columbus Southern ·
10:52 a.m., North Second, Power, right of way, Orange.
Juanita Gerade,lreated.
Charles 0 Weber, Judy
SYRACUSE
Weber, Keith Weber, MaoceUa
6:22 p.rn, Ohio 124, motor Weber, Vida W. Johnson, Douvehicle accident,Wendy and Eliza- glas E. Johnson, to Columbus
beth Shuler, PVH.
Southern Power, right of way,
·
Orange.
Terry Weber, Connie Weber,
to Frederick J Stobart, Earlene
POMEROY - FJmer Bailey Stobart,deed,lebanon.
Michael R . Johnston, Kathhas been elected president, and
Robert Hawk vice president:. of leen Johnston, to Timothy W
the BedfOrd Thwnship 11-usrees. Bent2, Pamela G. Bentz, deed
Ronald Wood is third chainnan. Village of Pomeroy
Community Action Program
Regular monthly m~ have
to
Christina Gater, deed, Syrabeen set fur the second Thesday of
each month at 7 p.m at town hall. cuse Village.
Don
Richard
Starkey,
deceased, to Emelie A. Pride,
deed, Sutton.
Cheryl Marnhout, Randy
MIDDLEPORT -A class in
MamhQI!!,
to Wayne S. Wilson, ·
beginning aaylic de=tive painting will be o1fered at the R.Mr- Betty Wilson, deed, Letart.
C&amp;K Investment to James E.
bend Am Council, Middleport,
Pennington,
Alice E. PenningJan- 29 and Feh 5, 12. 19 and 26.
Sharon Stewart will be the ton, deed, Bedford.
Conrad
M.
Ohlinger,
instructor. Cost is $35 for the
deceased,
Elizabeth
I.
0 hlinger,
course, and $15 for supplies.'IVro
projects will be completed during deceased, to Sheila K. Cozart,
the class. For more infOrmation or affidavit, Village of Pomeroy
Jerrold L. B-.oof, Doris R.
to enroD in the class, residenB may
Roof, to TIS Rentals, Inc.,
call Stewart at 992--7196.
deed, Village of Middleport.
Nancy Martin to Kermit E.
Stalnaker, Brenda J Stalnaker,
TUPPERS PLAINS - An deed, letart.

lancftransfen

EMS n1ns

Offlcen elected

Art classes

Soup dinner set

ODNR

at the Old Dutch Restaurant in
Hocking County on March 2
fiom 8 a.m. till 5 p.m. and Rio
fromPIIgeA1
Grande in Gallia County on
The registrations are valid for March 9 fiom 8 a.m. till 5 p.n,1.
a period of three years.
The courses fulfill Ohio's
Registration information that "'Mandatory Boater Educati,on
n•eds to be corrected or Law and are approved by d1e
changed will still require owners National Association of Boating
to visit their local watercraft reg- Law administratoh (NASBLA).
istration agent, which includes They
at least 8 hours long
Division ofWatercrafi: offices and and include instructi&lt;&gt;n on
some Bureau of' Motor Vehicle required equipment, state and
Deputy Registi:ars.
federal boating laws, emergency
In 2001, Ohio had 414,825 procedures, and navigation rules.
registered watercraft according
For information, contact
to prelim'inary totals.
the ODNR Division of
In other matters, 2002 boating Watercraft at 740-353-7668.
education ·courses can be taken

=

1M !oil hoond 8t. • Pomeroy

{740) 812-3381

To eend e-mail

E!-'~

nowa Omydallyaantlnel.com

Onth1Web
www.mydallyaentlilel.com

d~

aU-you-eat ~up dinner will be
served at the Tuppen Plains Fire
Departrilent Saturday, 11 a.m. to
8 p.m. The cost is $4 a peison.

Dltver InJured

C:l.Y'DE t &amp;A'DIE. _ _ _ _..,.

Ext. 3

1

LOCAL BRIEFS

--= 'Send

Actvertlelng

~6;;;;;;-..J
.

Maxine Aldridge

ANY age IS I IJI'tlt age t0
INVEST IN UFE INSURANCE...
uk ua for tht BEST
coverage for YOUR netdal

Other eervla.

'Addres~s~:-----------------------------------------------

, tqliting the dry's $190-mil, ~ lion-·a-year convention business as a vital part of healing
the city's racial tension .

RACINE - Clara Mae Powell, 89, of Racine, died on
Sunday, January 20, 2002, at the home of her daughter, Mildred Orr. in Gahanna.
She was born June 10,1912, in Antiquity, daughter of the
late Earnest and· Minnie Wolfe Adams.
She was ·a resident of the Racine community her entire life.
She was a homemaker and a cook at the Racine Elementary
School. She was a member of the First Baptist Church in
Racine.
.
·
She married Chrisie Powell on September 26, 1927, in
Pomeroy, and he preceded her in death on March 5, 1981.
She was also preceded in death by her grandson, Raymond
Robinson; a great-grandson,. Tom Atwood; sisten, Edith
Adams, Ella Quille11 and Ethel "Dewey" McNickel; brothers,
Clarence "Jake" Adanu. Jack Adams, Reed Adams, Marshall
"Bob" Adams, and Eari"Duck" Adams; and a son-in-law, Starling Orr.
Surviving are her stepmother, Mary Wolfe Adams Kesterson
of Pomeroy; three daughten, Dorothy Spencer and her husband, Elson, of Racine, Mildred Orr of Gahanna, and Eleanora Davis. and her husband, Charlie, ofThcson, Arizona; eight
grandchildren, Larry and Kay Spencer, David and .Linda
Spencer, Ike and Judy Spencer, Arlene and Jack Andre, Ed
Orr, Jackie and John Beatty, Carl and Carolyn Robinson and
Bryan and Annie Robinson; 16 grandchildren, Mike and Lois
Spencer, Selena Spencer, John Spencer, Lisa Wolfe, Sherri and
Tony Vivone, Paul Orr, Jessica Orr, Brittany Orr, Amber Orr,'
John Thomas Beatty, Jeremy Beatty,, Jason ·Clegg, Nikki
Robinsqn, BJ Robinson, Mark Robinson and Marc and Valorie Atwood; seven great-great grandchildren, Ashley
Spencer, Haley Vivone, Hannah Vivone, St~wart Atwood, Garrett Atwood, Erica Atwood and Thera Atwood.
Also surviving are two stepsisters, Judy Flowers of Point
Pleasant, West Virginia, and Ruth McGrath and her husband,
Tom, of Pomeroy; a stepbrother, Charles Gene Adams of
Kansas; and a sister-in-law, Florence Adams of Letart Falls .
· Services will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, January 26,
2002, at Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine, with the Rev.
Rick Rule officiating. Burial will follow at Letart Falls
Cemetery.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home on F~i­
day. January 25, 2002, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 8
p.m.
Grandsons will serve ~s casketbearers.

The Daily Sentinel
Our main concern In all atories Is
to be accurate. II you know of an
81T0f In a story, call the hewaroom

----·-----·-·-·---------------------·-·y~ur

H&amp;R
BLOCK

llJect i11 Cmc 111nati this year,

I

m

(APPROXIMATELY 60 WOI\l)S)

everything you have

Call
l·fiOO.HRBLOCK
or visit hrblock.c:om

. :J

3 INCH AD ... $15,00

own taxes Is
.qulle aburden.
Fortunately, we do
ror • living to make
sure you get
coming. And to help
llghlen your load.

Ttual

m

ltoppyVoltnii~•Dav
Granclmo, Gronclpo,

.. Mommy. Daddy

T111aLHammack,Kmna,WV...,

land,Midl:leport,$30
cce,seat.
belt; Chad D McHelll)lW!Jedm.
hug. $30 and COliS, speed; Laura
H~ J.lornetO)I S2D
COliS, fail..

•

lit Valentine'• Day ,1

Trying to do your

1040.

(APPROXIMATELY 30 WORDS)

Happy

the

City officials
try to hold on
to convention
THAT'S A LOT
business

of Sizes and Prices
l'/2INCH AD .. $7.50
0

.

CO!IS, seat be1t;James E. Harri!on,Jr.,

With ~Sentinel Love Message!

1 .INCH.AD ..... $5.00'
(APPROXIMATELY 10 woRdf7

,,, speed

Columl:u,S30 and C011S,speed,S30
and. COStS, seat belt; MeiDsa A.
Spencer, Thledo, $30 and COliS,
speed; Rus!ell E. Bush, Pairiot, S30
and COliS, speed; Anna c. Whitr,
Athens, $30 and COliS, speed; D.Md
L Raine)! C'dlipolis Ferr)l ~
$30 and COliS, speed; Brian K. C1e-

--Your Waf-- On February 14th
Ex~ples

f

~

S30 and COliS, ~ Heidi 11
Sharpe, RDte. Ul and COliS, bilure to conlrol; jollcpl! B. Harper.
New ~ WV...., $30 m COliS,
speed; ]acen D ~ Camarilles.
Calif., $30 and costs, speed; Rap
D\!mnalter, Gilbert,~. S2D and

's \'alen-time

Longtimea activists step down

POMEROY- A mmber of andCOIIS,~\v.lyneDR.urryoo.
\'I'm: recently pmces!ed by ~Ul aiJ!l COliS, seat bek;Jon
,; . M~ County Court Judge~ Pieri:e, Middleport, $100 :md COliS,
' L Story.
_
10 ~jail upended to IV\Oo Q1e
Those fined '\IYel'e: Don ~ ' eyor proi:Gtion, .restraining order.
· !e)~ Bidwell, $30 and ~ unm~- domestic violence.
. . sonai* speed fix conditions; Dar·
Michael R. ·MIDe;r, Spokane,
lene ]- Remers, Pt. Pleasant,~. Wi, $850 and cxiatS, 10 days jail
$25 and COliS, three days jail sur suspended to three, six month
. . pended.~tion,one ~proba- . liceme ~one~~
tlon, pmtng bad checks; ~ T. tion,jail and $500 bpCr1ded upoo
· · Gruesel; fumetcy, $30 and COliS, ~ ofRTP ScOOol,driving
' . speed; Genev.t WJSe, Middleport. under the inlluc:rn, $24 :md COliS,
I
$30 and COliS, seat belt; ~ P. speed; janice L Hart, Rockbrid!!e.
' · w.ud,I\ri111d,$SOandCOIIS,h~- $25 and COliS, three ~jail sur·
mg wuh an illeg;U tireann; ChrNo- pended, one year probation. pa!Sing
pher Imboden, Middleport. $2)) bad checks; Thldy E. SlaterJr.,
and COliS, three ~jail smpended . fumettJ)I S25 and COliS, open conupon proofofa valid Jice&lt;R within Cliner, $30 and COliS, seat belt, S25
'· · 90 days. one year probltion, driving and cOsts, fillure to conlrol;John E
under ~n,$25 and oostS.flil- Y0l111S RDte, $100 and oos1s, 10
ure to display; Li1a M ~ ~jail suspended to ~ otie year
Pomero)l $25 and oos1s, three days probation, ~ a ~ while
jail suspended. restitlltion, one year intoxicated, $25 and oos1s, dOOrt:ler, ' probation, pas!ing bad checks; Den- ly conduct;D.Md K. Hall,~
nis 0. Chul\wuemeka, HWlring- $2D and COliS, seat belt, $50 and
ton, WV..., $24 and COliS, speed, . oos1s, drug palllphernalia; Aaron D
$200 and COliS, three days jail sus- ~ l\JmmJy, $50 and oostS,pospendedupooproofofawlidliceme sezion, $100 and COliS, speed,i$50
within 90 days. one year probation, and COliS, reddes! opetltion, $2))
driving under suspemion;Dianna s. and CXJIIIS, three days jail suspended
, 1 Bidwell,$25 and costs, three daysjail upon plPOfofa valid lianse within
SU!pl!llded, restilution, one year pro- 90 days. one year probation.~
· .IJotion. pa!Sing bad checks; Boonie under !lll!pell!ion; Ru!ty Smith,
S. Donahue, Middleport. S30 and fumet&lt;l)l $50 and COliS, three ~
COliS, seat belt; Harold E. Carson, jail suspended, one year probation,
i .
Middleport; S2D and COliS, a!!liied restraining.order, tdephone ilaraclear diltlnce ahead; ]ames P. Rick, ment, $50 and COliS, three ~jail
laguna Hilb, Calif., $30 and COliS, suspended. one year probatioJl,
speed; Sandtll E. Morris, Racine, restraining order, menacin@; 'lema
S2D and COliS, fillure to conlrol; w Wiliedc, ~ ~.
.. ' . Mril .Garza, Ddiance, $50 and oostS oni)lfillure to stop at stqp sign;
, _ · oos1s, speed; Cody A. Martine, Mt .Beryamin W. ~ ~ $100
. Vernon, $30 and COliS, speed;'Thrry and costs, 10 day$' jail upebded.
R. Kaylor,ReedsVille,S30 illid COliS, . 'probalidn .Urilil 21 . '
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days crash in the mountriils about 40 mile5 south ofBagmni air base.
. Glasgow's mother, Susan Shamp, told The Daily Record that bel:
sons wife, Tara, had a ciJ?nce to speak With him by phone and said he
seemed strong and was. doing fine. Shamp said her daughter-in-law
said Glasgow's hand is injUred
·
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Maj. T.V. Johnson, puJ:&gt;lic information officer at the Marine CorpS'
Air Station in Miramar, Calif., would say only that Glasgow is listed as
injured, but expected to make a full recovery.
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Ohio

Obituaries

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AKRON (AP) -A woman was·amsted and charge&lt;! Monday m"'
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Dr
the death of her boyfriend's 13-month-old daughter. '
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Police said leigh A. Postalwait, 20, ofBaroerton, caused the .injuries MC~L~MB~ (AP}and ~~~~!:frmthdai
0
. Sept. 19 that resulted in Ashley Kirk's death tv.u days later, when she . 0 r ' rp.
tour moo wren Sites m
~ wr e
was removed fiom a respirator.
·;cornpanys proposed $1 billio~ U.S.plant
. .
Swrunit County Medical Examiner Lisa Kohler said the girl died " H~dai President Dong-Jun Kim plans to tour a Site m Mount
fiom blunt-fooce head trauma .
Orab m southern Ohio Thursday and Wapakoneta in northwestern
Police said Ashley likely ~ the victim of shaken baby syndrome, a 'Ohio Frida); US.. Rep. Michael Oxley. Findlay Republican, said
condition that occurs when a child's fragile brain slams against the · Monday. _.
.
developing skull.
' Oxley VIStted Seoul, South Korea, on &lt;:-~-,
• .;,..,~_, to promote
Wapakoneta and Ohio to the company Company officials want to
·break ground on a U.S. plant this spring and produce a car by 2004, ·
·' lie said.
·
CLEVElAND (AP) .- Columbia University seismolOgists s:I¥ '· "They want to get on with it," Oxley said "1hey're a very focused
dozens ofeartiJquakes in the northeast corner of Ohio have been trig- cqlnP'!?y; they're intent on being in the top five auto producers in
gered by millions of gallons of waste Uquid that were injected into a ' world
mile-deep well.
·r '
. SethismearthologistsuakesLeonardthin?Seheber anf d John Armbruster began study- . i,
maft ...._._,
mg e
q
WI
ours o the first reported temblor July 13, ·
.
n-115
1987,neartheAshtabubTownshipwell.
' BRISTOL, Jnd (AP)- Rescue teams =hed the St. Joseph
. Michael Hansen, chief seismologist fot. the state of Ohio. was skep- 'i'tver on Monday for the body ofa Oeveland man whose rental truck
tJcal about thetr theory but now says there is no other plausible expla- dipped off an Indiana: Toll Road bridge.
nation.
.
.
Kenneth Earl Pryor, 37, was headed west about 8:45 am SWlday
"I don't see any other real al~rnative;' Hansen told The Plain Deal- when the accident occurred, Indiana: State Police said 1eawer
er.
Police believe l'ryors !r\lck sQ.'UCk ~ bridge wall, rode up on the
~~rail for .about 175 feet, then dipped over the bridge •arid went
WOOSTER (AP) - Ari Ohio native injured ;n a helicopter crash
in,to the fiver abo\lt 20 mil~ east ofSouth.aend. • , , • , I , l
in Mghaniscm that killed two Marines will fully recovery.
'.
Pryor is b.eli!!Ved to be dead, police said.Weather was not a factor in
Douglas V. Glasgow, 33, ofWooster, was one of five injured in SaturCLEVELAND (AP) -. No Buckeye 5 game ticket had the right the accident.

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month. A spoiler on top of the blade fun- satellite technology record. the Jabtude
nels blowing snow down under the truck. md longitude of the trucks, their speed,
_"When the snow is blowing up OYer how much
·m~ are dispening. and
the cab," the driver is basically blind," said road and air temperature.
"We're going to we this data md hopeDoug Burke, p-ansportation engineer for
ODOT's office qf equipment rmnage- fully (orne up with optimum mutes,"
ment. " · '
. Burke said.
One of th~ blades will be .tested in
Ohio officials hope to develop a heavnortheasr -Obio, in the district that ier-duty venion of the road-friction
ilicludes Erie. Huron, Lorain, Ashland, monitor, which they say haSn't withstood
Richland, Crawford, Medina and Wayne · !Qe rigon of snowplow use ln other
counties. The state had not yet deter- states. The moniton are expected to be ·
·
mined where it will test the other new road-tested in February.
blade.
A sensor will be part.,. o( a wheel
· Officials al$o are testing automatic mounted t11lder the truck to determine
vehicle locaton to keep uack of trUcks so bow slippery the road is. That should
they can quickly be sent where they are improve safety for the drivers and help
needed most.
·
determine the right amount of salt to lay
Every 10 seconds, global-positioning- down, Burke said.
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U. 2111
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Ohio testing new ways to keep highways dear

Ohio weather

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PomerQy, Middleport,

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TUeada~Jan.22,2002

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The Daily Sentinel
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Ohio Valley Publlehlng Co.
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Chllrlene lioetllch

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I..MHn to lite HJIOt'.,.. WfkHt•.

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D11ne .~ Hill
Control lit'

Oeneral Ma1111ger
n, 11uMU H

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crnd}«t to Hi/iiiJ Md Mtut be ri111N Mtl 1M,. altbnt W _,._. .....,.
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7'M opiltilHLI U~Wftlnl lit tilt coluu hlow.,., tJu CtHUtlf.l., oftA. Qllo 1WN:f
hbU.4ilfJ Cu. i tdiloriGIIHMnl. •11la1 ~~ fUJhd.

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NATIONAL VIEW
1,

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Wrong
Marine ground troops are
getting short end of supply stick
• North County Times, Escondido, Calif., on
Marine unreadiness: Photo after photo of Marines
chasing Osama . bin Laden in Afghanistan show the
troops in standard-issue camouflage gear - jungle ·
camouflage. The problem is, there's no jungle in
Afghanistan. And according the Marine Corps Commandant james L.Jones, the corps' complete order of
23,000 desert and woodland camouflage gear will
not be delivered for four years.
... It's no secret that the deserts of the Middle East
and Central Asia are among the most unstable places
in the world. And with the lion's share of the world's
oil there, it one of the . most likely places for U.S.
Marines to see action. That Pentagon planners could
not foresee the need for desert camouflage gear is
puzzling to say the least.
·
The Marines are nearly always the first to be sent to
the world's most dangerous places, yet their simple
need for decent gear seems to .have come last for the
purchasing and supply officers at the Pentagon. That's
·
not right.
It's understandable that advanced jet fighters and
bombers require years of development work, but
forcing Marines to wait four ye~rs for decent camouflage gear is simply unforgival5le.
·

: TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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KONDRACKE'S VIEW

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timely le'tter. I, too, have seen torn,
People who are unable to dlspnse
faded, rain-drenched American flags of the flag in the prescribed manner
flying frof!l car windows, and tan- should contact their nearest Amerigled flags on homes ana apartments. can Legion or VFW post. Most of
The U.S. Flag Code, adopted in them have an annual ceremony in
1923, describes the following rules which old and worn flags are properly destroyed.
for prQper flag protocol:
{1) · Always display the flag with
Readers who would like a coPY of
the field of blue in the upper left- the brochure "Our Flag: How to
ADVI6
hand corner. To display it upside · Honor and Display It;' and a flag
'\
down is consi4ered a distress signal. fact sheet on "Flag Retirement,"
(2) It should be carried aloft and need only request it and send $1
world: If you use the ·~g in your
ads, please don't alter it,; ne of our free, never flat or horizontally.
plus a long {business-size), stamped,
local radio stltions went o far as to
(3) The flag should always be k'ift self-addressed envelope to National
replace the blue field ol"stars with its clean and safe; never let it become Flag Foundation, Flag Plaza, 1275
torn, soiled or damaged.
,
Bedford Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15219own logo.
When people get old and gray, it's
{4) The flag should be destroyed 3630.1t can also be reviewed on the
time to love . and cate for them. by burning in a dignified manner.
Internet at www.americanflags.org.
When !lags get old and gray, it's time
(5) Always treat the flag with Or call the NFF toll-free: (800)
to replace them. - KEN DALE, · respect. Never embroider it on 615"1776.
WEST LINN, ORE. ·
household items or pieces of clothDEAR ABBY: I have a question
. .
DEAR KEN: Thank you for a mg.
regarding wedding shower gifts. I

Council on Aging ···

Biomedical research is in for some mixed reports
Despite shrinking government revenue, ·President Bush plans co fulfill his
promise to complete the process of doubling the federal medical research budget
over five years.
That's the good news. The bad news is
that he may be reigniting rivalry among
disease groups by arbitrarily ordering
that cancer research get a much bigger
financial boost than other diseases.
And there's more bad news in Bush's
COLUMNIST
failure, after a year in office, to name a
permanent director of the National
Institutes of Health.
Conservative Republican senators
Four of NIH's individual institutes,
reportedly are pushing for infectious discovering neurology, mental health, and ease specialist Robert Redfield, of the
drug and alcohol abuse, also lack perma- University of Maryland, to head NIH.
nent directors, as does the Food and
According to White House budget
Drug Administration (a separate director Mitch Daniels, Bush's new budagency).
get will contain "on the order of $4 bilScientists, disease groups and members
of Congress say the empty directorships . lion new dollars" for NIH, "finishing the
resu It in a "lack ·of leadership" for t he President's ··o
' . mmt.ttnent" to double the
. at a time· when key decisions budget over five yean:' ,Daniels said that
agenctes
need to· be made on biotcrrorism, stem Bush:s budget also would give a healthy
cells, cloning and scientific priorities.
boost for research on defense, energy
Either became the top jobs are vacant and the physical sciences.
or because it's·his managrment style, sciDisease group representatives say they
entists say that Health and Human Ser- understand the need t~ fight bioterrorvices Secretary Tommy Thompson is ism with research modiy, even though it
consolidating administrative, public rela- takes. funds away from . other priorities,
tions and Congressional liaison authori- . They are in an upro~'r. however, over
ty in his office, raising accusations of reports that Bush h~s unilaterally
"micromanagement."
ordered a 21-percen~ boost in NIH's
For NIH director, Thompson report- cancer budget while holding increases
edly has sent the White House the name for ocher diseases to 6 percent or 8 perof Anthony Faucci, director of the cent, down from 14 percent or 15 perNational Institute of Allergy and lnfec- cent in previous years.
tious Diseases; but no decision has been
Administration officials say the fundmade.
ing gap won't actually be that great
Faucci, highly visible on television as a because the National Cancer Institute
lead adminimation spokesman on will get an increase of between 10 perbioterrorism, is a popular choice among cent and 15 percent; while other insti1
. scientists and disease activists. He also led tutes will get increases "in the 8-percent
NIH's highly successful AIDS research. or 9-percenc range." ·
But it's believed that his requirement
According co reports, Bush was urged
for taking the top NIH job - keeping to launch a new "war on cancer" by his
his NIAID directorship- mar be unac- par~nts, the former president and first
ceptable to the White House,

Morton
Kondracke

lady. The Bushes lost a daughter · to .'·
leukemia in childhood.
Favoring cancer over other illnesses, '
however, inevitably will reduce budgets ' . '
for other disease,; and is likely to set off ·.
a rivalry among disease groups that have ·.·
been united around the goal of "lifting .
all boats" by doubling the whole ·
research budget.
,
"We're gracefuf for the overall budget
increase," said Kevin Mathis, director of
the Campaign for Medical ResearcH, .. ·
"but it's bad procedure to politically single out a specific disease for extra ·:.
money.
"If the ·administration starts earmarking for specific diseases, there's no way ·
you can stop Congress from earmarking,
and various di~ease,spedfic groups from ,
lobbying for"earmarks."
Ideally. . scientists at · NIH . should set .
funding priorities · based on scientific·: · .
opportunity -"'the chances of conquer~:
ing a disease -. .. and on public ·health
needs.
·
.1 .
Presidents, members of Congress and:
disease groups do ngitatc for "earmarks"
- Bill Clinton provided extra timding .
for breast canter and AI OS to reward
favored ronstituency groups, for exam-· ::
pie - buf it's divisive and may misdirect .
sc1ence.
Cancer, the nation's second-deadliest.
disease, already is the best-funded of all.:·
research targets, with a budget more:.·
than double that of heart disease, the· .
·nation's No. 1 killer.
··•
.Almost as many people suffer from':·
diabetes as from cancer, and diabetes kills : ·
200,000 people a year, compared with ;'· ..
550,000 for cancer. Yet, the cancer bud- ·.
get is more than six times higher.
•
A strong NIH director might be able ·: ·
to persuade Bush to let science, not per- ·'·
sonal ·preference, set xhe budget. But :
first, the president has co appoint ·one.
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(Morton Kondmcke is executive editor of'
Roll Call, the newspaper &lt;if Capitol Hill.) '! ,
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Love most those who deserve it least

pelpeq

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DEAR ABBY: How do you
chew out someone whose heart is
in the right place? During the Cold
War, I spent almost six years defending the. flag of our country. While I
,am delighted to see it !lying everywhere, folks - please use your bead
as well as your heart.
A !lag flying from a car at high
. speed takes a beating. Please replace
it before ' it turns into a rag. ·r have
seen some so f~r gone that only half
the flag remains.! even .saw a pair of
... flags hanging horizontally from a
car trunk. They looked like mud
!laps.
.
·
If you display a !lag at your· home,
please keep it hanging free. If there
has been a strong wind, unwind it. If
it has caught on the shrubbery,
please untangle it.
Finally, a request to the business

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SAINTS AND SINNERS

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Wamsley retires from

______________________ ___

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Tuesday...nu•ry 22, 2002

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live in my own apartment. My
fiance lives at home with his folks.
We registered for some practical
things mostly items for the
kitchen ..
My questioti: Is it rude to use the
gifts BEFORE we get married?
We're not being married for four
more months. It feels a little strange
to be putting our wedding shower
gifts to use, but isn't that the purpose - to set up housekeeping?
Please advise. GAYLE IN

TOLEDO
DEAR GAYLE: Call me an
incurable romantic - or perhaps
superstitious - but the time co start
using wedding shower gifts is after
the honeymoon.

Pauline Phillips a11d her · daughter
Jeatme Phillips share the pseudonym
Abigail 1/&amp;n Buren.

·, .

Today is Tuesday, Jan. 22, the 22nd day of 2002. There are
~43 days left in the year.
. · Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 22, 1973, the Supreme Court handed down its Roe
v. Wade decision, which legalized abortion using a trimester
approach.
'
On this date:
In 1901, Britain's Queen Victoria ·died at age 82.
In 1905, thousands of demonstrating Russian workers were
fired on by Imperial army troops in St. Petersburg on what
became ~nown as "Red Sunday" or "Bloody Sunday."
In 1917, President Wilson pleaded for an end to war in
Europe, calling for "peace without victory." (By April, however, America also was at war.)
• In 1922, Pope Benedict XV died; he was succeeded by Pius
XI. .
. . In 1944, during World War !1, Allied forces began landing at
Anzio, Italy.
.
In 1953, the Arthur Miller drama "The Crucible" opened on
Broadway.
In 1970, the first regularly scheduled commercial flight of the
Boeing 747 began in New York and ended in London some 6
112· hours later.
In 1972, Britain, Denmark, Ireland and Norway joined the
·European Economic Community.
.
In 1973, former Presi~ent Lyndon Johnson died at age 64.
The tale of two prisoners ...
In 1995, Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy died at the Kennedy comCanada Blackie was a murderer serving a life sentence in New York's Auburn
'pound at Hyannis Port, Mass. , at age 104.
· ' Ten years ago; Pfesident Bush named Andrew H. Card Jr. to
Prison when Thomas Mott Osborne
be transportation secretary. The space shuttle Discovery blasted
became warden.
.off with seven astronauts.
.,
· .
Osborn; tired with his dream of rehac
· Five y~ars ago: The Senate confirmed Madeleine Albright as
· bilitating prisoners, was determined to
· the nation's first female secretary of state and former Republimake Canada Blackie the cornerstone of
C~n Senator William Cohen as defense secretary.
·
his experiment. "At first," says Willard
One year ago: On the anniversary of the Supreme &lt;:;ourt
Sperry in recounting the story, "Blackie
was stubborn and uncooperative. But
·decision legalizing abortion, President Bush signed a memorandum reinstating full abortion restrictions on U.S. overseas
the warden refused to give up on him.ln
·aid. Four of the seven convicts who had broken out of a Texas
the end, he melted Blackie's hardened
prison the previous month were captured southwe;t of Denheart and the lifer· became the chief
ver; a fifth inmate killed himself.
advocate of Osborne's program."
• Today's Birthdays: Former Sen. Birch Bayh, D-lnd., is 74.
When, finally, Canada Blai:kie lay
Actress Piper Laurie is 70. Actor Seyntour Cassel is 67. Auth&lt;;Jr ·
dying of tuberc1,1losis in the warden's
Joseph Wambaugh is 65. Actor John Hurt is 62. .Cou11try . ,house, he said, "There are some. people
singer-musician Teddy Gentry (Alabama) is 50. ~ock alti~e~ : · ~h6 . h~Ve
me. ·ThfY are not the
Steve Perry is 49. Hockey Hall-of- Fam(r Mike Bossy :(s .:45. , , 'preachmg·.and praying kmd. But there
Actress Linda Blair is 43 .Actress Diane Lane is 37.Actor-rap 'DJ
have been some people who have treated me better than I deserved with the
Jazzy Jeff is 37. Couptry singer Regina Nicks (Regina Regina)
is 37. Actress Olivia d'Abo is 35: Rhythm-and-blues singer
result that they made me better than I
Marc Gay (Shai) is 33. Actor 13alth~zar Getty is 27. Actor
wanted to be or thart I naturally would
Christopher Kennedy Masterson (oldest brother in "Malcolm
have been."
in the Middle") is 22. Pop singer Willa Ford is 21. RhythmThe other story is told by a night
and- blurs singer Kelton Kessee (IMX) is 21. Actress Hevcrley
prison corrections officer writing in
Mitchdl is 21.
Guideposts magazine. He tells of an
Thought for Today: "The clearest statement of principle g~es
inn\ate who was put int&lt;,:&gt; solitary confinement after attempting to kill a fellow
bad if it is repeated too often. It ceases to be a statement and
be•omes a slogan."-VirgiiThomson,American composeF and
prisoner. ·
critic (1896-1989).
Whenever the officer would · pass by

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Patriots must !earn proper respect for the flag

111 Court St., ~Ohio

740 112-21158. , ..;

~-an_ySe_n_tin_ei_ ____,;,;Iy. the

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George
Plagenz
COLUMNIST
h,is cell in the middle of the night, tl1e
inmate would leap from his cot, shake
th, bars arid shout obscenities at'tl;wn, He
had vowed to kill the first officer who
tried to. come into his cell. But one night
the officer opened the cell door C)uietly
and went in.
"You know," said the officer, "there is
a much simpler way to insult me, and it
would save you a. lot of energy. Why
don't you print what you want to call
me on a poster and hang it on your cell
door befort• you go to bed? Then you
wouldn't have to wait up for me every
night."
The prisoner was bitter and abusive
over the intrusi.on, but later, after he had
calmed down, he confided to the officer
that: while th e idt·a might be a good

BY

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

HOEFliCHOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY -After nearly
three decades of working with
Meigs County's senior citizens, Alice Wamsley has retired
· from her employment with
the Meigs County Council on
Aging.
She had been the nutrition
program director there for the
past 16 years.
A reception honoring
Wamsley for her contributions
to the agency will be held
Sunday at the Senior Citizens
Center from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
The public is invited to
attend.
Her vrork with senior citizens began in February, 1973
when she was hired as a secretary ·(or the newly organized
Retired SeniorVolunteer Pro-

. gram (RSVP).

•

LOCAL EVENTS
Community Cal1nd1r 11
publlshad aa 1 free •ervlce to non-profit groups
wishing to 1nnounca
meetlnga and . spac111
eventa. The c1Iendar 11
not de1Igned to promote
sale• or fund-r1lsera of
any type. Items are print·
ad only •• apace permits
1nd cannot be guaranteed
to be printed a specific
number of days.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Childhood
Immunization clinic at the
Meigs County Health Depart·
ment, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 1
p.m. to 3 p.m. Take child's
shot records. Must be
accompanied by parent or
guardian.

RACINE - FlACO meet·
ing, 5:30 p.m. so RACO
members can attend the
town meeting at 7 p.m. There
will be a potluck dinner.

6:30p.m.
•

RACINE - Public hearing
POMEROY
Ewings
on Racine's CDBG water
Chapter,
Sons
Of
the
Amer•·
and lire truck grant applica·
lion, 7 p.m., Southern High can Revolution, meeting at
the Meigs Museum. Dinner
School cafeteria.
at 6 :30 p.m. meeting at 7:30
p.m. Reservations due by
RUTLAND - Board of
Tuesday. Speaker will be
Leading Creek Conservancy
Marlene Harrison, Meigs ,
District, organizational meet·
County Clerk of Courts.
ing, 5 p.m. followed by regu·
lar board meeting.
REEDSVILLE
Riverview Garden Club, 7:30
WEDNESDAY
p.m. home of Frances ·Read.
POMEROY Bedford Members to take item for
township Trustees, special auction.
meeting, 7 p.m. at the town
hall.
SUNDAY

MIDDLEPORT - Spacial
THURSDAY
meeting of Middleport Village
POMEROY - . Meigs
Council, 5 p.m., to accept
resignation of Clerk George County Church of Christ
Hoffman and to appoint Women's Fellowship, 1:30
p.m., Pomeroy Church of
George Hawley.

.

A section of the old
Pomeroy Junior High School
had been converted into a
center where elderly residents
gathered and the program of
Alloe W11111Iey
craft work and aocial activities
was being · expanded to its new space in the Meigs in church and community
. include community•service.
Multipurpose building in the programs.
Vacation trips and spending
. Pour yean later she wu pro- early 1980s.
moted to director of volimAs for her retirement activi- a little more time with her
teen and her responsibilities ties, Wamsley aays she'D have daughter, june Ann, and son,J.
:· 1rew to include development · no trouble filling her time. . R. and their families are also
· of suitable . vol11nteer sites,. Right now she's getting ready in her retirement plans.
She says her goal is, "By the
recruitment, training . and for spring when she can get
scheduling ofvolunteen.
out and garden, by "picking time April gets here, I've got
. In 1984, when the nutrition up and sorting through" all everything done in the house
program was beginning .an sorts of things, something she and can spent my time out. expansion of its home deliv- didn't have time for while she side."
Last summer she helped
ered and-in-house meal pro- worked.
grams, she was promoted to
"I've cleared out a lot of old some with the downtown
nutrition. program director, a magazines, read a couple of Pomeroy flower beds and now
position she held until the end books, and today I'm off to the chat she's retired she hopes to
of December.
library;'Wamsley said.
do more of that.
During her years of employShe has enrolled in a course
Another thing she plans to
ment, she saw the focus of the to become a Master Gardener, .do is continue handling trips
agency change from sbcial to has joined an aquatic exerci~e for the senior citizens, chis
service, and the number of class at Royal Oak Resort, Is time' not as a paid employee,
health and ed.ucation pro- volunteering to help teens at but as a volunteer. And, of
grams increase, particularly God's Net, and is looking for• course, she'll continue dancing
after the Center moved into ward to becoming moi:e active with the Swingin' Seniors.

Volleyball, Basketball, Football, Wrestling.
Cheerleaders, Band Members, or any other winter
sport with a special ad In the Tuesday, January
29th Edition of the Dally Sentinel. '

Your Message ·
without picture
(Actual size 1 col x 2")

.for only.

Getting the whole family
involved in activities· .
'.. Tips for bringing
.. everyone together
NEW YORK (AP)- If a
chat room doesn't provide
... the sense of community
you are looking ~o instill in
your children, Par~nts mag-.
azine 's February Jssue has
· some suggestions to get the
. · whole
family
more
. involved with friends and
,
neighbors.
··
The
magazine
also
includes an interview with
Robert Putnam, a Harvard
University professdr of
public policy and the
author of "Bowling Alone:
The Collapse and Re~iv~!
., of American Commumty

'

f

...1 ...

'
(Touchstone Books).
telephone numbers, e-mail
His research has found addresses, ages of children
that families are less likely and information about a
now· than a generation ago family's hobbies or interto invite neighbors over for ests.
dinner and parents are less
• Start a Web site. Some
likely to join . community Internet ·companies allow
groups.
creation of free Web sites
But Putnam also says that for neighborhood bulletin
people who · do make the boards or a calendar of
effort to get involved c.ypi- events.
cally are rewarded with liv• Share meals. Enlist a
ing in c·ommunities wit!) small group of neighbors to
lowet crime rates.
rotate hosting a once-aSome ideas "to sow the month potluck supper or
seeds
of . community" barbecue .
• Create a child-care coinclude:
• Make a director.y. Ask op. R ,e cruit people with
people who live in your young
c~ildren
·to
area if'they'd like to be hst- · exchange chtld care. Post
ed in . a neighborhood notices ,in . pediatricians:
directory
chat
would offices, day-care centers or
include names, addresses, local supermarkets .

MIDDLEPORT- Middle·
port Church of the Nazarene,
980 General Hartinger Park·
way, Middleport, 6:30 p.m.
featuring spacial music by
Family Heritage.

Show Your Appreciation To
Your Favorite Team Member!.

•.·,

one, lie couldn't write. •,
"
The officer agreed to teach him. Ea~h ·: .
night from then on, he found the pris- :
oner's profane ·greeting displayed on a .
poster on the .cell door.
'··
, A .few weeks later, the officer told the .;··
priSoner that he :Would teach him addi- ~:
tiona! words so that he could learn to · ·
read. It was agreed, and there were : .
· .
lessons each day.
But every night, as the officer made .: '
his rounds, the,re was the obscene sign .:···
that the prisoner never failed to hang up. ;
Then one night, aifter a weekend off ; '
duty, the officer passed the cell and was \.
pleasantly surprised. The old sign was '
down.ln its"place, the prisoner had h!Jng :
a dilfer.ent sign that read ' .
·
, "·
. GOD BLESS YOU SARGENT. ,··
GLADYOV.' REBACK: · .· ··' ' · · . ' ·
The moral of these ' t~o little' sto~i~s .
really has nothing to do with prisoners ..:•.
It has to do with us. If the approach used:'
.by the warden and the guard w~uld' .
work with hardened criminals, ·why :
. wouldn't it work with the diffi cult peo~·.''
pie we encounter in our everyday lives&gt; · ·
Not only do "they need love most ..,
who deserve it lease" but "one loving
heart kindling another" is probably the
molt effective way there is to change .
lives.

Christ. Dexter to have devo·
lions, Pomeroy, the program.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053, at the hall, Tuppers Plains. 7 p.m. Meal at

'5
(Actual size 1 col x

for only
Please till out and return with your payment to:

Go Team C/o The Daily Sentinel
·

111 Court St. Pomerotn.Ohio 45769

lbijilill.i ·.: :!: 110 \\1Fll'\FSIH

Name:__________~------~--~--------------------~-Message: ______________________________________________

Phone: ________J'Iddress; - - - - - - - . , . - - - - - -· - - City, State, Zip: __________________________

' •'

�hge A I • The O.lly Sentinel

Tuesda~Jan.t2,20C~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

,Inside:
College, pro hoops roundups, Page B6

care ul with your sodium intake

..

The Daily Sentinel
•

Page 81
Tueedey. January u. lin

It is important to remember that
although our bodies need a small
amount of salt, we almost always
·consume too much of it.
Salt
(or sodium chloride) is essential in
keeping the fluid in our celb at the
proper level. It also he)ps control
other body functions which include
blood pressure and maintaining the
lining of the blood vessels. However,
too much salt can lead to hypertension or high blood pressure. This
happens when the body cannot get
rid of extra sodium. Fluid starts to
build up. The extra fluid increases
the work that they heart and the
kidneys must do. Because they are
·working harder, blood pressure will
increase.

Higher than normal blood pressure. (140/90 or above) may develop
into heart attacks, kidney disease
and strokes. Too much salt may also

Becky
Baer
TIME OUT FOR TIPS
contribute to other health concerns
such as gastric cancer, kidney stones,
and increasing asthma problems.Too
much salt has been associated with
loss of calcium, resulting in osteoporoSIS.
The Nationaf Resear~h Council
of the National Academy of Sciences recommends that amounts of
sodium be limited to berween 500
and 1,800 milligrams daily. The
problem is that many Americans

consume much more than that some people have up to 6.000 milligrams in a day. Because of the high
incidence of sodium in their diets,
almost 50 million Americans have
high blood pressure. People who
have a family history of hypertension, are middle-aged men, middleaged Black women or elderly are
most at risk. But no one is immune
from the disease, because blood
pressure normally increases with
age.
What foods contribute large
amounts of salt to the diet?
Processed foods are the real culprit
in today's society. Research shows
that 75 percent of the sodium that
Americans consume is found in
processed foods . Once the food
industry has included salt during
processing, it can't be taken out.
Breads (salt is needed to make the

yeast work properly), processed such as fresh fruits and vegetables to
meats (lunch meat, hot dogs, bacon), counteract the effects of the salt.
convenience foods, nuts, pickles,
Dori't cook with salt. If you must
potato chips, sauerkraut, cheese, use it, add it at the .e nd of cooking.
soups aiUI canned vegetables all have If you add it at the beginning, the
sig)tifif~t ~mo.unts of salt in them. salty flavor somewhat diss!pates
Fast foods and Chinese food also are (possibly increasing the hkehhood
extreme)¥ high in sodium. When we that more salt will be added at the
add sairtb· food when cooking·or at · table) but the sodium is still present.
the table, it only makes matters To e~hance flavors, use herbs. spic~s
worse.
and lemon jl!ice or try a non-sodiWhat can' be done to lower salt um replacement. You can also ask
intake? Avoid convenience foods, restaurant chefS to omit. salt from
lunch mtats, restaurant meals. salty your food during the preparation.
snacks, cheese and .c ondiments like
By following these simple tips to
pickles and ke~chup. Read nutritiop help you have a diet low in salt and
labels on packaged food . Govern- sodium, you can reduce your risk of
ment regulations mandate that low- hypertension and other related illsodium claims be true. Choose low- nesses. It just takes a little p~nning;
salt versions of canned vegetables,
(Becky Baer is Meigs County's
pasta sauces, crac.kers and snacks. If Extension agent for family and consumer
your meals rend ·to be high in so&lt;!.i- sdences/community developme.nt, Ohio
um, eat lots of high-potassium t'oods State University.)

.'

TUESIAW's

.HIGHLIGHTS

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Prep Basketball
. Girl•
Mond8y'l O.IIIH

SEOAL .. .
River Valley 55, Logan 49
Gallla Academy 67, Athena 56
Warren 64, Jackson 36
Marietta 46, Pl. Pleasant 39
.
TVC
Belpre 69, Federal Hocking 43
Southam 58, Vinton Co. 55
Eastern 40, Meigs 35
Waterlord 61 , N-vllle· York 46

OTHERS
.
Oak Hill 73, Wheelersburg 52

College Notebook

ON NUTRITION

'

Not all
•
IS

milk.
equal ·
sium?- C.B.,Y~rk, Pa.
Dear C.B.: Magnesium is
an essential element needed
for maintaining normal bone
strucrure. (Half of the body's
·
· m
· our b ones .) It
magnesmm
1s
·IS aIso requ1re
· d .or
~
· I
norma
nerve transmission, muscle
relaxation and normal heart
rhythm, Good dietary sources
include avocado, nuts, bana!la$,
legumes, whole grains, .dark
leafy greens, milk and oysters.
DEAR DR. BLONZ:
Can you explain why vitamins
expire? S.H., Arlington
Heights, Ill.
Dear S,H.: .Vitamill5 . are
rea~tJve compol:'nds that play
an mtegral role m most of the

DEAR DR: BLONZ: I'm
a lactose-intolerant diabetic
who misses milk. I use soy
milk as a substirute, and I have
noticed something about the
soy milks
·
that are sold fro m
I
the grocery sh eves
v~us
those sold in the cooler next
to the cow's milk: The shelf
soy milks are much higher in
carbohydrates. One brand, for
example, has 130 calories (35
calories from fat), with 18
grams of carbohydrates, while
another has 100 calories (35
calories from fat). with only 8
grams of carbohydrates.
Why the dramatic difference? Until I read the nutrition facts, 1 thought soy milk

into a slurry and strained to
remove insoluble residue. That
given, each product is formulated according to a company's
desired qualities. It .can be
· or fl avore d , w1t· h or
p Iam
·
w1th out fa t, and WI·th or WI·th out added nutrients. Soy does
not contain much calcium of
its own, so a number of companies fortify their products to
lend it a milk-like nutrient
profile.
Prior to packaging, · most
commercial soy milks undergo
an ultra-high temperature,
short-time
pasteurization
prQcess known as UHT. Some
products are then put into rectangular aseptic cartons, safe

flavored). Is there something
about the way the shelf soy
milk is packaged for nonrefrigerated sale that requires the
·
1eve?
1 My
higher carbohydrate
concern stems from the fact
that I am a diabetic, and I
watch my carbohydrate intake.
As a. shopper, though, I have to
watch my wallet, too, and the
cooler soy milks are usually
much more expensive than
their shelf brethern. - J.C.,
San Diego, Calif.
. h da"rry milk ,
D ear J•P..: W 1t
.there is a specific· industry
standard, but such is not the
case with soy milk. As a result,
soy milks are free to roam
.
along a Iarger ingred1ent
an d
flavor frontier. There isn't anything right or wrong with any
parti~ular approach. Soy milk
is a beverage made from soy,
beans that are soaked, ground

cartons contain a special layer nuneral supplements tend to
that prevents air or moisrure be quite stable vitamins can ·
I 1. I
t•
ti
penetration. The packaging is sow y oseh po ency overb mke.
the key, not the level of carbo- Factors t at encourage rea hydra tes m
· th e 10rm
~
· u1a. d own me
· 1u de h unu"dity, tern,
Soy milk stored in more perarure and light, and formu· na1 cartons ne eds to 1as t h at contam
· ~•at-so1u bl e
convenllo
be stored at refrigerator teqt- nutrients tend to break down
perarures. In both cases, there the fastest. The best way tb
will be a "best used by" date, . store products is in a tightly
so be sure to tead this infor- sealed container in a cool, dark
M any suppIements
I
marion befiore you rnake your pace.
selection. Once opened, both include moisture-absorbing
types need to be refrigerated capsules or packets to help
to maintain freshness and maintain product quality.
should be used within five to Product expiration dates indi·
·
. b
seven days.
. care w h en ·th e VJtanuns can e
Incidentally, if you are lac- assured of full potency, assum. Ierant and want da"1ry mg
. t h at th e pro d uct h as b een
tose mto
· t e1Y·
milk , th ere are now 100 -per- store d appropna
cent lactose-free products
Ed Blonz, Ph.D., is a nutrition
available in. many areas. Check sdentist and the author of"Power
with your grocer.
Nutrition" (Signet, 1998) and
DEAR DR. BLONZ: the "'Yclur Personal Nutritionist"
Which foods contain magne- book series (Signtt, 1996).

~shli ~evan, Brad Bevan,

fi.my Bias, Jill Blake, Mark
~.~owen, Christina CarpenJ:er, Robbie Cundiff, Mona
Durst, Sheryl Gibbs, Angela ·
Flarness, Janet Hill, Kelley
Klein. Trudy Lebo', Jacque1'-P.e McComas, . Sharon
-«iller, Amanda Miracle,
~wn Myers, Mitchell ParCOLUMBUS - . Elizabeth +s, Melissa Plantz, Nicole
Hope Farley of Pomerov, Ramey, Elizabeth Robin" son, D ame
· 11 e · S aun
· d ers,
Macyn Ann .Ervin of Racine,
v
1
·
s
c
and Misty Dawn Shaffer of a ene
pence,
rys t a1
ReedsviUe were named to the Sp,urlock, Linda Stover and
honor roll at Ohio State Uni- · CaAdace Tuttle. .
versity in Columbus for the
Achieving a GPA of at
fall quarter, earning grade least 3.0 were: James Barcus,
point averages of at 1east 3 .5 . Diana Beaver, Diana Ben•
nept, Tracy Carter, Jenny
Elliott, Charles Flowers, P.J.
Gauze, Brandy Grover, Leah
GALLIPOLIS _ Gallipo- · Harrison, R~ndy Harrison,
lis . Career College has Stacey Humon, Maranda
~released
list of studeim · Holmes, Tu~a _Huney, Dana
named 'to tbe achievemel)t Johnson, ~1lham_ Lambert,
' J R Martm Mane Martm,
(" ti f: II '
t 2001

On hono·r roll

Named to list

a·

·u·

wdi~e:~:c:'~~:.e::inpfai~ ca~ . ~~es~~~!pe :~ ::emye~r'1~~~ . "~~~~~·
'th:.:~~ys. ~~~o=· ·~grade
~t:de~J
~:~.:i~g a,." 4.G '· ~~~ljy ¥~f?j'
•·•; /J.fi~~
.
pomt average · were: lVJc1Vh m,
ar es
1

.
Ad
D
0 Jana
ams,
onna
Aleshire, Belinda Bailey,
Daivd
Barnes,
Kerinie
B · M
B h M .
1
1
.
C rown,
.
.B y ha us , C e Jssa
1
Bamd, Ce~kanTy
Co vm,
mak. rews,
Mren a D oo
. , V.
Ell"
1
ary
a~Je s, .1c 1
IS,
Sharon FJala, Tm~ . Frans,

1

'

Tammy Moore, Stacy Moss,
J
·ti M
J
tt
Nenm er
Cunhcy, . eanpne _e
ewsome, _ ns.tme arnet,
Demetras
Parsons,
Ronald Parsons Ashley
'

Shafer, Roy · Smith, . Steve
Spires, Shauna Spires, Larry
Stephens, Brandi Wandling.
Merida Whittington, Cas~
sandra Will, Paula Woods.
,

Achieve
URG
, J"
dean s 1st

RIO GRANDE - The
following Meigs County srudents
were named ·- to . the
,
dean's l1"st at the University of
Rio G~nde :
.
Meghan E. Avis, Mary E.
Beach, Kristy S. Bowman,
Matthew D. Boyles, Melissa R.
Brown, Matthew P. Caldwell,
Richard E. Collins, Nicholas
A. Dettwiller, Tommy ]. Ferrell, Jeannette Grate, April D.
Kiser, Alysqn N. Lewis, Carrie
L. Lighrfoot, Jenny L. Long,
Ashley B. McKinney, Amanda
M. Milhoan, Michelle L.
Miller, Atpanda L. Notthritp,

J~:~~ ltf~;f?ce~.s(fe;;i;0~:

Rees, Roger E. Riggs, Adam
. W.. R oush • Kelly L. Smith'
Maggie L. Smith, Julie 1\.
Spaun, Shannon Thomas an8
Tere~a w·illiams.
:
'

IIIII Ill TilES· WIIJ I

lD DANTU UGHTEN
1 1Sp~e,
ran Y
YOII
Shern Johnson, '---:---=-===~===---

~h~da F~~-~r Patnc~a G~,

rJS\Y
Johmon,
C
J d
V'kk" L.
.-- ,
1
. aro yn or an, . 1 1 Jevmg, Kathy LJvely, Rae
Mash,
Diana
M
G ~my McGuue, M
11
MCW~l·lr:e·
A ody
c 1 1ams, .
man a
M. h II S
M
· S
d Jtc Me • . akra K~rrJs, S anhus•c
J rah
s· , Jm R et . , r
o
nny
ogg1e
S . h J 1mmons,
h
S ld
·
mit • So n~y pa~ m~,
~r~y M tf.P eTn~, . ~~cie
a or, W. e ~sa
ar.:;,n~ h ar
an
ng t.

CIIPUTEIIZIIIE'JIIIIIJII
HUll
IEfl. 11 1 •-1 Of • - 01 IIIBS
- • n;
•••
. . . . . . . TU e•ICEIYII .1.411

1

;ISSS

.

TU bJ DAJIT.IIu

IS TIE 1180 CIIICE

Venus' flytrap needs help eating
'

BY La REICH

it just feels the same about
that lump of hamburger as it
Everyone is . fa~iliar . with does about any small stick or
the omino."s lookmg l~aves of seed that might accidentally
~he. Venus fly~rap. sp1ked ~t fall into the trap. The plant
the1r edges, hmged at the•r wants live food. Venus' llycrap
. centers, and ready to clamp recognizes a live catch by
shut ~to.und unwary prey. sensing movement with.in the
There s httle chance of a fly trap for a few minutes ofter it
,alighting on the leaf this time clamps shut.
1Jf year, s~ you. might .conSJdOther" than having to hunt
-er droppmg m a plece of up suitable food for the plant,
haBmbuVirger. , fl
,
you , won't find Venus' flytrap
h ~ enus ytra~won t eat difficult to grow as a houseam. urger - WJ ouht some plont. It is native to infertile,
coaxmg, at least. T e trap
.d. b
. N h C 1·
might not even close up acJ JC ogs m ort. aro J~a
·
fh burger and South Carohna, so Jt
,arQun d a p1ece o am
·
.
.
..
.
. h ·
'It closes only if two of the thnv~s m a pottmg so11~ at JS
mually sensitive six hairs on nch m sand and ~~at, Without
its surface are bent, or if one any hme or fertilizer added.
hair is touched rwice. It's the This is one potted plant that
kind of stimul:&gt;tion an· insect you can leave standing in
might give walking across the water, or even under water,
trap.
for extended periods of time.
Even if all those hairs are If your tap water 1s alkahne,
just touched, the plant still just add some vine~ar (~ tea-·
might ~ot eat the hamburger. spoon per quart), collect rainThe pla"nt isn't a finicky eater; water or melt snow. A terranASfl!OCIAT.ED PRESS

urn with some ventilation is
ideal.
Given humiqity, a suitably
poor, moist, and acidic soil,
and as much Iight as possible,
a Venus' flytrap not only will
grow, but. might eve'! flower,
as well. The flowers are not
showy, 1iut they are followed
by seeds - scores of them.
Planted soon after ripening in
moist "sphagnum moss, the
seeds germinate within ·a
couple of weeks.
New plants also can be
t d fr
th
d
propaga e
om e un erground stems. Cut pieces
fi
h
h
1
rom t e m,ot er p ant,
· remove all but one attached
leaf, then stick them into
moist moss to root.
Incidentally, you can trick
the plant to eat a dead fly .or
hamburger by gently massaging the trap after it closes,
mimicking movement of a
liv~ . insect
within. Bon
1
appetlt.

RACINE - To opposing teams,,
the Southern Lady Tornadoes are the
".C ardiac Kids"; To the RacineSouthern community they are just
winners.
..
Like the script they have us~d over
the past four grinding games, Southern fell behind early fn&gt;m an 18-2
de~cit to come back and post a dramatic 58-55 Tri-Valley Conference
Interdivisional win over -Division II
Vinton County Monday night in
Hayman gymnasium.
. "
Both clubs are vying for the top
'. spot in their respective divisions; both
premier teams in the league. .

Vinton
County
drops to 10-4 overall,
5-2 in the league,
while Southern owns
an elite 13-2 overall
mark, S-2 in the
league.
Southern
coach
Scott Wolfe said,
"This team has .charPuRIM
acter. They never
give up ever, and they
always find a way to make it exciting;
likewise they find a way to win. I a"J
very proud ofthem for their accomplishments and am. thankful for the
many blessings we have had from

above during this season. This Wil) was eight the second half, also adding a
a great win for the progr;un - the huge floor game with five assists and
six steals.
·
icing on the cake."
Southern was led by 5-3 sophoRachel Chapman hit a huge three
more sharpshooter Deana Pullins. pointer in Southern's comeback, hitShowing no fear and little emotion, ting 5-of-6 the second half in SouthPullins drained three-three pointers in .ern's victory run. Katie Sayre added
a stretch that saw Southern co me four points, while adding six rebounds
from a 22-4 deficit early in the second and having a good defensive game and
frame. Pullins led Southern with 18 offensive floor game. Sayre led the
points, hitting 7~ 12 from the field, and Tornadoes with six assists.
grabbing four rebounds.
Ashley Dunn got her Happy 16th
Brigette Barnes also had a pair of Birthday present with the win, hitting
crucial three-pointers and a . great 4-of-7 free throws in the final round
floor game, netting ten points on the and hauling in a game-high nine
night and grabbing eight rebounds.
Amy Lee added ten points, including. · . PluM -Southern. 84 .

/

Eastern pays .back
Marauders, 40-34

NCAAMen'a
Mondly'I.O.IIIH
Penn 73, Lafayette 66
Siena 79, lona 71
St. Peter's 71, Cenisius 62
Alabam• St. 67, Southam U. 57
Alcorn St. 91, Alabama A&amp;M 82
Char. Sahm 71,1linn-Southam 44
Coli. of Chari aston n. Citadel 65
Delaware St. 62, Norlolk St. 62
Elon 75, Uberty 53
·
Florida A&amp;M 75, Coppin St. 61
Funnan 76, Chattanooga 65
Ga. Southam 96, W. Carolina 67
Hampton 79, Howard 56
. Morgan St. 66, B.-Cookman 64
N. C.A&amp;T79, Md.-Eastsm Shore67
Tennessee 74, M. Tennessee 56
Tenn. Tech. 83, Tann.·Martln 75 .
VMI 93, Appalachian St. 91
Winthrop 83, High Point 75 .
Georgetown 63, Notre Dame 73
II.-Chicago 85, Youngstown St. 69
SW Missouri St. 76; Evansville 55
Oklahoma 84, Missouri 71
Prairie View 85, MVSU 78 ·
Tx. South. 74, Ark.-Pine Bluff 60
Air Force 74, BYU 64
UNLV.75, Colorado St. 68
Utah 81', New Mexico 51
Wyoming 68, San Diego $t. 85, OT

BY JoN WIU.
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Pro Basketball
. NBA
Moncllly'a Gam..
Charlotte 111, Nl[!w York 66
Atlanta 95, Houston 91
Seattle 109, Philadelphia 98
Milwaukee 97, Detroit 79
Dallas 113, New Jersey 105
Indiana 93, Chicago 81
Utah 101. Golden State 99
Minnesota 105, Washington 101
Miami 9s. Cleveland 93. OT
Boston 106, Toronto 97
Sacramento 112. Memphis 98
L.A. Clippers 102, Denver 89
'
.

.
.
Bumltz p1n1 to·
the Mets

NEW YORK (AP) -The
New York Mets pulle&lt;!. off a
three-team, 11-player trade,
acquiring Jeromy Burnitz from
Milwaukee and sending Glendon Rusch to the Brewers and
.Todd Zeile to Colorado.
Burnitz will fit into a lineup
with newcomers Roberto AloMo Vaughn and Roger
Cedeno.
New York also received
pitcqer J~ D'Amico, infielder
Lou Collier, outfielder Mark
Sweeney and cash from Milwaukee. The Mets got rwo
minor leaguers from Colorado.
The Btewers, who saved
.money by dealing Burnitz back
· to his original team, added a
left-handed starter in Rusch.
They also obtained outfielder
Alex Ochoa from Colorado
~nd infielder Lenny Huris
from New York. ·
The Rockies filled their third .
base hole with Zeile and added
outfielder Benny Agbayani.

mar, .

HOBBIES
•

I

I
aac:tcll

·
' Achieving a GPA of at . Pennington, David Ross,
R.eceive. d6JiiieiS
.~ast 3.5 were: Sheila Atha, Kathy Sands, Marilyp
COLUMBUS - '.Jeffiey
Todd Grueser and Trevor Alan
Petrel both of Racine and
Paul Edwin O"Maille ofMarietta received degrees from
Ohio State University· at the
end ofaurumn quarter.

Southem knocks off Vinton Co.

Eastem No. 14
In latest poll
COLUMBUS
-The
Eastern boys basketball team
is ranked No. 14 in the lat~st
Ohio Associated Press Div•
sion IV prep hoops poll.
S. Charleston Southeastern
(13-0) received 23 first-pl:&gt;ce
votes to hold the top spot.
Centerburg was second, folJ~wed by Tipp City Bethel.
Bristolville Bristol and
Russia ri&gt;unde.d out the top
five 1spots.

PLAY DEFENSE - Eastern ~dY. Eagle defenders close In 6n
day's game. Eastern won 4\&gt;-34. (Jon Will)
.

a

TUPPERS PLAINS - In
the first ·match of these crosscounty foes, the Meigs
Marauders pounded the Eagles
into submission. The tables
rurned last night, for it was the
Lady Marauders who submit-.
ted to the Eagles · for the· first
time since the 1997-98 basketball season.
Despite the tremendous
adversity of having two out of
· three seniors on crutches, the
Eagles dug deep inside themselves .and found out if they
wanted it badly enough, they
coUld have it. The Division IV
Eagles wanted it badly enough
to upset the Division II
Marauders (8-6) by a score of
40-34.
. .
: Eastern's saga of IIIJured players pl:&gt;ced three sophomores in
the starting lineup, one freshman, and ·one senior to lead the
pack. With Mansfield.being the
only senior, and leading point
women Watson and Karr on
the bench, not many would
have predicted victoty for 'the
Lady Eagles.
Eastern was led by a 13-point
performance by Katie Robertson. Robertson was one
rebound shy of a double double, but played a tremendous
role in shutting down Meigs'
post players Davis and Soulsby.
Robertson did not act alone.
Mansfield hit rwo treys and hit
a foul shot to add 7 points to
the Eagle tally.
· "It was obviously a total team
Meigs ball handler In Mon· effort tonight. These girls didn't

care who had the points, or
who.had the ball, all they wanted to do was win," said Coach
Brannon of Eastern.
"We didn't play our game
tonight, but I have to give Eastern the credit. They played
good defense, and we didn't
expect this much out of them
with two players out and so
many young players. Eastern
has a great ball club," commented Meigs' Coach Wilcoxen.
Meigs pounced on the Eagles
in the early minutes of the
game. A three point bomb by
Shannon Soulsby put the
Marauders up 4-0 with 7 minutes remaining in the game.
Following an Eagle time out,
Mindy Chancey drained a
jumper from the elbow, giving
Meig; a 7-2 lead two minutes ·
into the game.
Alyssa Holter removed the
tranquilizer dart from her
shooting arm and brought the
Eagles to life by hitting a 15foot jumper to bring Eastern
wi.thin rwo points, trailing 5-7.
Sandy Powell juiced the Eagle
scoreboard with four straight
points to tie the game up at
nine all with 2: 15 remaining in
the first period. Katie Jeffers hit
a jumper from the elbow with
:30 remaining in the first frame
to give the Marauders a rwcipoint first quarter lead.
Meigs charged off the bench
to start the second quarter.
Buckets by Davis and Soulsby
quickly put the Marauders on

PIRH- hltem, B:S

•

Rupe, Davis earn
mat plad~ments.
PAIL U PoLcYN

OVPCOR~DENT

\
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.- -With rwo wresders finishing
in the top eight, Meigs finished 17th overall at the WSAZ
wrestling tournament last weekend.
.
Zack Davis finished third in i:he 189-pound weight class
by pinning Price from Chesapeake
and Clatke from Ashland, losing to
·Delebreau from Williamstown in
the . · championsliip semi-finals.
Davis then bounced back and defeated Lafferty from Liberty in the consolatiollrl semi"finals and. defeated ·
Frazier' from Cabell Midland m
the consolation finals. •
J~&gt;~ ' Rupe placed fourth iri
the 171-pound weight class by
· pinnlhg Doggess from Nitro,
decisioning jacob Carr from
Point Pleasant, losing to Nick
'
from Gallia Academy in
the championship senii-finals,
defeating McCoy from Herbert
Hoover in the consolation semifinals, and losing to Carr from
Point Pleasant in the consolation
finals.
Zack Davis placed eighth in the th-pound weight class
to help River Valley finish 22nd oWilan. Davis lost his firstround match to Watd from Buck.harulon-Upshur. He fought
back ,from his opening rou~d loss ~nned Belcher from
Liberty and defeated Setliff from
el,l Midland, Then,
Davis lost to Allen of Nitro in the co lation quarter-finals
and lost the match for seventh and eighth p~ce to Morgan
of Cabell-Midland.
•
·

GETTIN' LOOSE
· - Pittsburgh
running back
Jerome Bettis ·
stretc;:hes before
a team workout.
Bettis missed
the Steelers'
first playoff
game, but
e~pect to return
Sunday. (AP)

Bettis, Holmes will play
PITTSBURGH (AP) Jerome Bettis had . the most
unusual afternoon of his NFL
career- no pain and no gain.
That's why he won't get a
precautionary painkiiJing shot
before the AFC championship
game Sunday.
Bettis, the Pittsburgh Steelers' Pro Bowl running back,
wishes that he didn't get a shot
just before Sunday's playoff
game against Baltimore. The
injection apparently struck a

nerve and caused one of Bettis' leg; to go numb, preventing him from playing.
Bettis has taken painkilling
shots before without a reaction, and he has no idea why
this injection went wrong.
Bettis has been out since
Dec. 2 with a groin injury, but
practiced for three weeks
before the Ravens game and
fully expected to play. He
insisted he didn:t need the
shot to play, and got it only to

mask any potential discomfort .
in his groin ..
"I knew there would be a:
lot of pain associated with the ·
injury and I just wanted it to :
feel better," he said Monday. ·
"The scar tissue still has to ·
tear, and it is nowhere near as ·
strong as regular tissue, so
there's going to be pain.
"It's nothing that will keep
you from playing. It's just

'

�•

•

•

.....••
•• •

tltrtbune - SentinelCLASSIPIED

:::
:··
,.
••
••
••
•

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

-••

• •

"
'

• •. w • •

In one week With us

••
••
t
'l

by Davis and Soulsby
quickly put the Mmuden on
top with a six-point lead.

Buckea

Eastern

mentor Brannon
~ a time-out to make a
few quick adj!Utmena with
6 :10 left in the second frame.
, Alyssa Holter again surged
forwani folloWing the timeout. Holter muscled down an
offensive board and converted
Homo- bringing the Eagles within
~ PaHing, llfnyl tid- {pur points, 15-11. Davis
•.. '*'*"'Y· - .,-_ .qutck1 y mpond ed and mus-· -. ~-"':..
:~ ckeled_,her own ~ath to .~e bthasford 5000 Gu T - wl1h
t .or two pomts to ..eep e
5110
Allied
......... 19e1·11ee Oldollt- Cui- 11;123.
: (740)3711-11311
.
hiiiOCAI./
Mmuder 6-point lead

.. , . omaller
:~ :

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

Ads

All Dllplly: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.

lito

Lr
__

HEuWANml

•I'EJl&lt;loN.wi•
·----~·--A-tton-tlon_l

_ _.
Eam 2nd. Income without
2nd job up to
$25.·$75Jhr. Pl·ft.
1•800•218
7"..
0, ~
www.Monay· reams.com

'
Beginning t/20/02, lhere will
be 00 trustpassl'l on 138
Bullernut Ave.,

omoray,

Ohio
Gootteman Seeking Whlta
Female Over 50 Years For
Walks And Friendship. Re-

ATIENTION:'
RNSAND LPNS

ply To: 553 2nd Avenue.

Gall ipolis. Ohio
Ajiartmont403

11'

Arcadia Nurs.ng

45631', Part· Time

Center ,

posillons are
available on anomoon and
====~-.,--- Midnight slliR. We offer eK·

10

10

HEuWANml

11'

McClure's Restaurant now
hiring aU 3 locations, lui or
pan-lime, pick up apphca·
lion at tocallon &amp; bring back
belwooo
9:30am
&amp;
10·008 Monda
lh Sat
urday m,
Y ru
·
.
Need Full Time Retail Cieri&lt;,
5end Resume 10: CLA 550,

IAial
· 1'1Mnllll
POl

. . ..._.001............ •CurNill nlec.nliappiM. •.U .............
.. ............... ,..... ,.., ......... Miof1. . .
aootp~~Oftlrhltp...aed . . Millllr'IEOEatwodwd&amp; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........ a . . . lnvtolllklnal . . ...

r·

'to~ I

~ I.

I

r'o

~ue

like 10 join ·our team. apply wnh a great team ol profes· ~~rt
In person belween 9:00· slonals. Applk:anl musl be . ng.

Ohio singles tonight, call toll

:11

0 0 N

AVONI All Areasl To Buy or and travel lor career ad·
Fun ExOI'Cioo Prlvllle leo- Sail Shirt ~sonL learn self def8nse at
.
ev ........,ars, 304• vancement, PBI'd hotldays,
K
u... School · 7ol0
onpo ~••
. ·
742·2546
· .
MARY KAY PRODUCTS
10% Off First Item,
50% Off Second Item.
In Stock Items Onlyl

vacation and sick lime,

.

model double wides 3br.

CEU

hours,

.

~~
.. "' . FOR~ . '
· •

14x80 slaPJslding 2K8
walls., 14x70 slap/aiding
2x6 walls 3br. 2ba., Late

Galli II

·•

P~

(740)742.0212.

2002. GMCAA Is an equal

.

(rooled), on ranted loi, 6pm, (304)773-5604

mixed Breed Puppies. 3
DATA ENTRY
males. 1 female ..very Play· Process Clelmslor Oclc1ors.
ful and adorable. (7ol0)245- Will Train. PC Required.
9082.
Greatlncomelll
~AND
,1-800-240-8197, Dept. 958
...._..,,
www.ll&gt;'wned.com
FOUND
Oemonatralors
needed
Part-time 10 hand out Sam-

,
r

Losl: Large Black and Tan pkls &amp; Coupons In Local

385-2434.

Airedale. Last Seen on Hoicomb Hollow Ad, 1119/02.
Answers to Gus. Friendly.
~~~. ~~~;~r, (7401245.

Stores, $9.00/ hou1. Must
be available weekends.
Please Call (800)334:5233
Dontal Asolotant Needed,
Full Timo/ Part Time, Sand
1!111"""":~---...., Resume to CLA 546. c/o
AIJCilON AND
Gallipolis Dally Tribuna, 825 straight seams. (740)368Thl d A G8 Ill II 1 OH 9310
FLEA MARKET
po •
4 r ve.
563! .
Tho ·lbwn of Mason, wv Is

r

Rick Pearson Auction

I

Com·

Hair Stylista

taking applications . ror a

pany. full lime auctioneer,
complolo aucllon service
Ucensed 168 Ohio &amp; Wesi
VIrginia 304:773 .5785 or
304 .773,_5447.

Flaato Satons, a leading W.tor and Sewer worker.
provider of hair and tanning ClOSs 1 Clastllk:atlon preservices, Is calebrallng n-a fe"od. Will take applk:atlona
Grand Oponlnfl oariy FObru· until January31 , 2002
a ryf 11 you are a hi""'
.,.y crea- URGENTLY NEEDED·
~r=-~..;.:.::.:;.,---,~llvo styllsllooklng lor alrash plasma donora, eam S50 )o
WANml
stan, we have poslllons S60 per week for 2 or 3
ro BUY
a;;:'lr~e 1for ':nagem:.: hours weekly. Call Sera·
"styli818
u 1 'wme 0•.81 pan$300t Tee, 740-592-6651 .
Ab 1 1 Doll us
e " a
·
00 ute op
. or: · · hiring bonus. hourly wagea Wanlad: HalrstyMot for new
Silver, Gold Coin&amp;, Proof· up IO 50% commission, salon. For mora information
seta, Diamonds, Gold 401(K) , profll ohlrlng, va· please call (7o10l446-3747
Rings,
U.S. Curro~ calion. heallh, vision, dental .
'
M.T.S.. Coln Shop, 151
and lila Ina., free actlanced Would love to clean your
and ~venue, Galllpol•s. 740- educallon, and dlacountsl
homo, Dldel' CMstlan lady
446·2642.
··
Call Myms o 800·825· hea 10+ years experience
Wanted: Old Pinball M 63113x 3010 1o schedule en and releronces, cell any·
ad· lntoMewl
time, (7ol0)992·9761 .
chi nea, Juk8 Box.s an
Olhar Coin Operated Equip: Htlp wanlad caring lor lhl :
mont. Huntington. (304)429: oldorty, Do,.l Group Homo, «1.
BIJSIN£ili
3333
now poylng minimum wago, 1
1'lwNING
• new shlllo:' 7am:3pm, 7am·
flpm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm·
l \ 11'141\ \I I '\ I
7om call740 1192 5023
Golllpolll Corw COIIogt
'
' '
·
(careero CIOIO To Homo)
.... llt\111 "INIURANCIINIPIICTORI 0111 Todlyl740 448 4387,
iiltiiii&amp;r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ FllldWOrlcln Gslllpoiii/Gal·
1-800-214:04112,
liEu WANIW
lla COUnty ond ounoundlnfl
Rtlltllfl:05-1274B.
""""!es would rtfiulrw ba·
~
alo kl10wlodgo ol homo 000' 1110
WANTED
At1 atoohol and otnor drug llruotlon, -ring o&lt;lori·
To Do
counotllng/
provtnllon ordlmonolono,obaorvlng
agency IQOfltd In Qallla lnd ooncllllon and taking phot..
Jaoklon Counllto, 11 - · ofhomo.lndopandonloon· AJiolyourhomtropelro,od·
lng an ombiHOUI lndl~ldUII lroator/ pon• limo baslo.
d~lons &amp; ttmodtllng. 114hr
10 fllllllolollowlng pooHione: Mutt Ill dttal~ ontnlld,
omorgonoy taNioe, Nnlor
,,....,••• ldUOIIor• Thlo hove roNablolronaportltltl(l olllztnl di1100Un1: aayra.
pereonwlllworl&lt;wlthollago a,ndra S
eommmpuott"rwDIItglta1011101mmo·t .up. (304)871:2088
groupe In llolh oommunl11oo.
·0
:h
Aoaponolbllllltolnoluda:C.. aootttalton'c?,ful.
Georgoa Portlblo llwmlll,
ordlnoflon of Orug Froo ~=A~l.~:i.EOTOR don'l h•~:.~·~OIII ,t:.t7ho
Communlly
Coollllon,
POio•·- 3.,
mlllj1Atl ... l30 178-- ·
,,,
lvl"
ld
•• -•renees tot ""'
U· Parmi OH 44121· 0338 Movln.ll ond Hauling: Oloan
ootlon Programa, Training
'
Out lulldlnr., llaomenta,
Pragramt, and DtvtiOP·
Garag11, olalea, Traan
m.nt and l~tmtntallon Of LOOII Manuloaturod Hous- Eto . Odd Jobo. Ctil
new grafll projtot. A mini· lng Dollollhlo naalmllltdl· (740)446:71104
mum Of a lloholoro Dogree •• . 09fnlng for 'ull Time
wllh knowlodgo of aloOhol, Offlol Poolflon. E•pentnot ~tJPOfftlblo molhor of 1 will
loboooo snd othor drugo. pllf&lt;lrrod. lxaellanl Ogpo~ btbytlt 1n lltr horne. Coli
Bond rooumo by Ftbruory tunlty. Coil for lntorVIow. 87+ocllt oan IH•t I mes·
8, 11002 10: FACTI, 48 Olivo Fronoh City Homoo, Ina. tagt.
at, Galllpollo, Ohio 45131 or Galllpollo, Ohio. (740)448· "'1 I Oltnlfl~ 0 y Ctr p~
~o: (740)448·8014. 10!, 8340
olf
I
·~
MII'/H.
vldar hat openlngt for 1 or
Looal ~hyololon -king a Children. Loollad on AT
Oltlt A OOL Onvtr to pull quallfltd lndhlldual lor lront 33 In Ltlln. ,Ntw Haven
oonltlnert In WV, KY, &amp; dook position. Good Com· School Dlotrlol. 10 years.
OH. Homo •••ry -ktnd. pulor oklllo &amp; pnor Mid. Of· r:xplri.,.., Call (304)898·
Pay 110%. (740)388:8328
!lot Exp Required.
3188·

1995 Clayton 14• 70 2 bed·
rooms 2 lull baths dining
aroa, laundry ooom,' central
all, undelplnn.,g. 8xl8 COY·
ared pon:h. 8x10 building.
(304)675-7118 or (304)875·
5016

rio

Hor.m

FOR SALE

I

. (740)446 41128

•

76

Vlna

Sl. .:.;_===~-:::--

deposit Rafarancn ra' 2 bedroom apartment In
QUifed. SIOve &amp; Reltlgera· ~leport. complaloly retor.
NC,
GaNipolla . •~· $311!5.1111 a month,
(740)4:18-3667
..;;·~. depoalt, 740-9483bedroomhomeMinoravlo
or]40-e92·2043
el88, river vieW, $450 'per ' ':I Rooms and Balh, Newly
month, references required, :.Remodeled.

Oownthlkw.

and Alr Condllloner, .Brand
New, $1150. CaD (740)25612_1.;,6_ _ _~=SPoRJ1NG
~
Gooos
, Grubb's Plai'\o: Tuning &amp;
Repolra. PIOblams? Need
M-l Garond, 31). • 06 Rlllo Tuned? Col Tho Plano Dr.
740~~4~4 6~
4 52~5~=--:-:
WW2 wilh bayonet, SSOO. ~
WW2 Era Mauser Bmm HordY Mumo 53.00 each 4

r

1-

.

for $10. Open Sat 8--Spn. &amp;

deposit required, no pelll, Stove and Roft1garMor, f.M
avonlngs. ~rot G.,.n.
740-992-6777 after 5pm.
atllltiH Paid. 46 011'11
houM MI. Alto. (304)895A1mQum;
37ol0 leave moaaege. or
3 Bedroom 2 SION, NICe: · ,s.-. $475. (740)448 31145
Gat Heal, $4251 ~h plul 'CMoly'o family lMnfl,
(:!04)896-3789
lltposlt. No POll. (7ol0)379-, 00140 New Lima Rd., Rut·
•
· lndapondenl Harballle 01&amp;:
2540
. land, Ohio, 740-742·7403. Buy 01 Mil. Riverine AnU· tributor, Cell For Produc1 Or
· Apartmonl, home and lraller quaa, 1124 Easl Main on Otll&gt;&lt;lr1unlty. (]40)441-19II2
4 BR Houao Within I mileS• rontala COmmercial 111ore: SR 124 E. Pomeroy, ,740· =;.;;·..;,:;,=:,_;.:,__..:..:::,

~· fronts ·avalt~Jbte

tor teue. 992·2526.

owner.

tlonal. (304)883-5726
·
·
4 Rooms &amp; Bath, $300l
month. 52 Oll•a Straw.
(7'"'""-3"'5
,•Ul,
_,_, 4 Roorno and Balh In Ganll):
ol~. Depo~l &amp; Rtforonce

Russ

Moore; -

.Res_I Home -

Tappan HI efficiency ao plus

"T" gas lurnacea Including au
and elaclrlc 11"1! luma·

North 3rd Aven.,., Middle:
port, 1 &amp; 2 bedroom lumloh:
and
ed apartmenls, depoalt &amp;
reference•
......
(740)092.0\85 no
,..._, t:li~~iEJ

ces.

HI Elftcloncy Hoal
Pumps, leeturlng Tappeno
FrH 1-edlb'~ wt1rranty
~~frrs HEAnNG a
Now Taking Appllcallon..,
COOLING (740)441-MII
over 3000 sq h, large 95x105 Call Somerville Ae- Required.
No
Pl;ll. 35 Wnt 2 Bedroom Town·
or ~
1
lsncad fard, ,_ kllchen, ally at (304)675·3030 or (740)446-4491
houao AparlniOIU, Includes I Lorge Propo.,. Gao --~·
new roo 2 car allaQhed ga· (304)875-3431
Wallr
Sewage, Truh,
see Being llled ....:::::.:::=:..:::====='$146000
c 11
Pilot Pr~ram Rtnltro ••~·~ 7•• 446 0008
1 H
Soli $450 T-~
(;~)446.2311' .
a Foraale-16K70,3bedroom, Neadtcl,:i0'+7ae·7215.~
.............. a40,:'1669
. 9;":""~~. ~Ex~
2 balh, call 74o-385-9621
Upatalro 1 Bedroom Furerclser, S55 13" Television
816 Main Slreet, Pl Pl. aiiK for Cheryl.
3ttory ok!er home In toWn, nlohod Apartmtnl Localad 12 ol. Presto presoure COOl&lt;· Color, $as. (7.40)258:I52I '
Complololy Ralurtllshed. 2
.
great condition: Cloao •'f'1~' on Second Ave- U· .,, $2B; Muon jars
S1:
·
510jack W.lorllne Spacial: 314 200
otory, 2 Full Bolh. 3 Bod- IRS Spoclall We'll malch brary: Call. Ubrlry al F brlry. $3501 monlh plus U11- llko naw ADJ lloor
rooms. Largo Kllchen, your tax return up lo $2,000. READ, tld 235.
o
Ill• (walor/lroah Is lnclud- (hoovy duty) 15000, max. PSI $21.95 Per tOO; 1'.200
Largo Utility Room,lRI DR/ C811 (740)446·3093 lor de·
M
HOMU od In rani). cau Dobblo or $20.(140)902.2521
PSI $37.00 Par 100; All
Family Rm. Now Carpet lalla.
0811En-- , ,
Judy al Ubrory (740)448·
•
.
BrBR CompressiOn fittings
throughout. FIA &amp; AIC,
JOR ~• (, 1 7323
900 (7401446,9565 or Llml1ed Or No Credit? Gov••
~·~:-:::--:---~·""':' 20 po. punch bowl oat (aH In SIOCk.
579
(].0)446.2205 or (7401446_ .ommenl Bank Flnonc:e Only
ho , •~ Sludlo/olllcloncy apanmsnt gl111) $20; concrOit out·, RON EVANS I!NTERPRI..
2
"I Oakwood In Barbouro· bedroom mobile me M $225 unfurnished, $250 fur: doOI otatuoo wlli1 or Wllhout !I Jackaon. Ohio, 1-8002683·
&lt;,r11e, wv 304-738-3409.
renl, no peta, (740)~92· nl- S300 dopooll,- pump $150: tloctrlc llndtr, :;63:..rc.::·95.:;2::8:....._ _.,--By Owner:Cape Cod on 1
5858
. ·
•
tralh inor.-, Middleport; $20, (740)III2:252I
Walklne Prod-: dar'&lt; and
.... llvtl lot with 11'101 4 Ull Hll 1897 18K58. WIU
~~~·.. , ~·· (7'") sbedrooms 1 112 botht
lp wllh d•llvory. Coli Har· 2 Bedroom Trallor, ~lipo. -,.. """"' ~. ~· 248MB Hard 011vt, Sound wf1Ho dOublt alrongth •anll·
Iorge kitchen Wllh double old, 740·385:G948.
Ill Arao. $2501 mOntf!,' O.
·
Card, F~. 13' COlo lo, t&lt;lractt, lpicM, - ·
ovont and lots flf cablnoiO M 1 11 14 70 obll paoli and RoforetfCit f'-' Tort Townhouao Apan· or Monllor, Pnntor, Key· nn:tnll and me(~):-r
large living room, CA 1,.j ..,"' oo il 740, 38;:2• 3: qulrld. No Ptts. (740)307• mtnll, Vtry Spaclouo, 2 baird, 1111 All. Coil pr ucll, , ca
9·
3112 7
Conlrll Haol, TP&amp;C Wator,
m.., E~11 1n 1
neo
Bid-, 2 Floorl, CA, 1 (740)446' 7804
:::::::.....~~--":':'-:
E-m Local 8oho01o, 1.. Ilk or
'
2 Bedroom 14, 80 wnh 112 Bath, Fully Oltrpolld, 8 HP Horlzon,.l Shell Whl,. kiiOhln ooblnol
ootid on Roulo 7 noar New 2002 14•70, 3 brl2blh. Poroh· All ErOctrra ueo o. Adu~ Pool a llby Pool, Pa· l!tlggc and Slra1101t Engine. 110.00, 1100 omp 11Ch~o,lor. All~ havo Onlyl988.doWni$18U7 poolt.'neo AonL Clooo 10 llo,lllrlf311,1MG,Nol'oll, AunsGood. FitiTIIIaro,L.og- up 1100.00, fl)tall
good carpel, slorm win· per rrtQntlf. 0111 Nikki, 740· Cinema (304)878·2100
Laoao I'IUIIIourlty OopooH ~ll"ore, tto. 188. Cafi 1110111 W&amp;rdrobt 121.00,
dowt, lull b a - . pltnly 3811-7871 .
•
' "oqulred, Daye: ·740441· (740)448:7804
740-882·~ or 740-1112·
ol 0 - ond 110-, Mo
2 bedroom, for III.Dr rtnl, 3-Cit; lvenlngt: 74().1187•
8718
garoge with oponer, homt o, nly • .'UO d11,wn and quiet community, nl&amp;l oloen 0801, 740441:0101,
Ironing baird, like new, 18;
Wll ·well molntalned wlln 181 .... par monOitln
yoou homo, (740)1112•211!7
Old pr, ~... tltlltt. :, O; -~""'ll!"""~~-..
aood palnl and wa_llpopar· 1 ntw homt.
I·B 0·
..
Twln"lvtr~.,_-,ao· tltctrlo htdgo ouhlt 10.
~
lilg, likinG pMOI 118,000 837·3231 Ilk lOr Mlkl.
3 lldroom Mobllt 1-iomo, 8 Ofllllng IPPI-I~no or btvt- oooltr, ' IM
.............,
unlll wo Rtl wlltt roallor. Pilot P
,
Pa
mlltafromCIIIIIpolllon21e.
11II.HUDtubtldllldept,
(740)111·2128
"'---llliiiiiiiiiii-_.1
81 111
Quick Nltlt nsecltd. 740- rem N:Bi:lilla'd-&amp;o&lt;ilt Very Nloo and " Clotn. fortlderly ~~-dloablod.
'IT
llook bltok
cit.
885~
·
an•'Qo m-nt •••nt 10 (740)258·1~17
·.
•
·
,
, - r Pff,
•
vt "~ r
.
(304)8711:8878.
AI"ATION MOTO~I
WI-, Nnttlt flo, ltudt
Atnllrt. Own YOur New lltuUful Alvor VIew Ideal
1
~tPtlrod New &amp; ~tbul~ In Wlnttro, ~lo Qranclt, OH
~1: lrand Ntw Hom. teoo Homt Todayl (740)448· ~or 1 012 Pooplo, _Atltron·
111ook. oln ~ Ivins, 1· Call740-248:1121.
aq «.. 1 112 aora 101. 3170.
..•• DtPooll, No Ptlo, ~ ... Upetalro AQ!Ior Flontln Gal· 100:817:8UI
5111,000. Call lor Info.
lor Trailer Pori&lt;, 740·441· IIPOIII, 1 llldroom, Dtp0tl1/ ·
1'
(740)448•41141 (740)441· lpoolal Ftntnolng· Down 0181 .
,.,
Atltronot, 12118. (740)448: - - - - - - - H41
.
Poymonlt II low •• 1%.
.
7130
Largo plollup load ml•td
·
Proqutllfy by phone, T,.llor In Rulland, a bed·
firewood will diNir r-11y, " - - •
Moraorvlllo. Throo Unll (740)448·3870.
room1, loaao required, no Vtry nlot 4 room oottago, 141.00 14e.aM7 OVtnlngo •
Apartmtnt bulk!lng wllh ono Wo havo a~n&gt;xlmatofu iiO poto. 740·7•2:2tlf
~~-~tP1nt' fJ.::..2,4+•2UIIIIhN,IItllll . La '~- ~-moro -~o 2 Milo CKC Asg- 'I'll•
aore
mil.
181,000,
••
'
~·- n
..,..
rgo · - • - low Laba ooa 1101100
(740)441·1108
Ulld homoo for undtr
APAiriMFJmj
1 yur ..... With dapooll. batf~ 180. Wood High 1110
h010' (740)H7:..
$2,000,01111:800·837·3238
' PDRJbNr
WMkdayl(304)e78·38U Chelr.UQ, (304)773·84112 7319 HCI
Partltlly Aomodtlod 110mo, lor Info.
,
a Bedroom, I Both, Full
Vory ·nloo, 2·3 btdroom Molal Desk, 4 Droworo on - - - - - - - llaomonl, Largo Unollaoh·
·1 lldioom Apt• Galllpollt. ~mtnl, In 1own, large one oldo, ShiiW on 1o11om, 4 Mo- P"l''i~ W~t~i
od 2 cor gorago. 127 Kino·
Wallr Paid U78 monlh klt&lt;hon, LR, 5800/mo. Rll· 301Ci10, vary Nlot, ~~~101 Grow Ia ·
·· •
on Dr., 580,000. (740)441·
pluo · dspoill. No Poll, trtnOIO &amp; dtoolll required. for Sludanlo Homework. 1740)848·0~. ' A•ollablo 1
~~~
(740)446-4043 a«tr 8:00pm (740)448:3844
120. (740)988-4409
or Vllonllnoo Doy. . .

r

ny, (740)896-2765

I

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t

1

r"

HAY&amp;
GRAIN

--

.

,._......

~ =7 •

_o.:;::

nice.....,

F

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.: •.

"'='

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=:

•••rv•

: ' 2300
qe Neon, 4 Door, 44,000
• mllao, Automatic, Air, Aed,
. Spoiltf,
$3800 080.

(740)256-68n or (740)258-

~

6467.

.. : Need Immediately Righi
;)

Hand Drive Vehicle four

- wheal drwe. Call. (304)875• 5891 or (304)6711-731!-3594

.r

-~

~

'

.

1

'' · 1976 ChaVfOiol c- Cab,
" Hlloboro Bod, Good Solid
Truck, 51500. (740)388·

,"

Oft .Your Enllrll Ftllllly
·With TheM Fun Retum Al;ldful
~s You ~sigh YOUtMif

By ChoOIIng Tho Holroylt, Color
And Skin Tono. Vltil us on 111o- at
www.tomllytalltlt.oom or coli lor ~..•
lui color brOChU .. II

1-100-1014172FAEI.

0438

1988 CiltYY 4K4, Exoolltnl·
ssooo. (740)378-

Condlllon,

21120

•.
':

I1117 Ford F• 150 ExiM\dad .
Cob; V-8; 5 ~ manual
Tronomltalon; Ntw Tlrll:
AI ~owor lqulpmont
CruiN; led Li""!i 1),19!1.0
mlltt. Exaelfonl ........n.
' 114,1100, OIH (740)448•
' 7231 lhtr lpm or loavo
• mo111go.
I ., 94 Cntvy lllvtrldo I'U, lx•
londtiG Cab, Trunk Lid,
, . . roav lllvtr, 150 lnglno,
. • PL1 P_W.. Ttalltr ~ lx·
' ,.._ ~ondltfon, (7'1UJI48·

. w•

r tw.:

Up to $47,678 per yur
Now

Hiring

Btnelltl &amp; Rltilrtmllf'll
For ApplicatiOn and Info:

1·800·U,7·8730

-

11

6

Eutom 9

8

Maigo

34

13 - oiO

Kade Roborteou 4 5-8 13, Sand)' Powell2
0.12, .-011130-06. TOTALS 13121840.
MEIGS - lJndaoy Bolin 2 2-2 6, Miod)&lt;
Chancey 3 0:1 7, Kalie Joffon1 1 0-0 2,
Samantha Plorco 1 0-0 2, Shannon Souls·
by 2 1-2 6, Jaynaa Davi• 3 5-7 11.'
TOTALS 12 8-12 34.
·
Thraa-Polnl Goalo -

Meigs 2(Soulsby,

Chancey): e.- 2 (Mansfield 2). '

Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door. ·

Full/Part Time
OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT

1-888-974-JOBS
Current
Detd (2tl) 821·1530
Recorded on 11H)3.f7
In Volume 17, Page ·Sheri II of Melge
227,
County

Eaat 7 feet to the
corner of lhl c,..k,
the corporation lint;
thence South 21
Plap1rty commonty
c~~g.... I' Eett 442
1111 to the North line
known 11: 21175 Old 1) I, 15, 22, 211, 2002
of S.E, Curtle (now
Street, Route 341, 2) 5,2002
O.M. Curtlo);. thenCII
......,y, Ohio 45710.
South 10 deg,..a 4&amp;'
Perctf No. OS·
Public Notice
Weot 219 IMt to the
001148.000• .
ly vlrtua of •n Eaat lfno of the
Locllecl et 18171
Old Stele Route 341, Ordar of Sale duly Pomeroy end Recine
leeued out of the road; thence North 28
Albllny, Ohio 41710.
Court
of Common degreea eo· thence
Appr•l••l value: .
pie.. of Perry with the ttld E81t
$100,000.00
10% Cllh depoolt Counly, Ohio, In the """ ollhl nHid !0 the
or certified check CIH of Coun1ryWide pi- of beginning,
Excepting 20/100
r1qulred on day ot Home L011rw, Inc., va.
1111, b1l1nce due Lunne M. Young, II acre conveyed by
upon oonflnnlllon of al, Dllendllnll upon a Henry Rouah a,d
Nil. IIHd to luue l,udgemenl !herein Marie Routh to C.H.
upon payment of rendered 1nd being Bryeon and Wella
balance. Thle land(e) CIH No, 01 CV053 In lryaon, by deed
or
tenement(o) ..ltl Court, I wll olltlr Recorded In Volume
cannot be eold for . for public Nil 11 the 221, Page 401, Mtlge
leaa then two-thlrde llhll!llf'• omoe ot the Counly Duel
County Recordo.
of the 1ppre1aed Parry
Courthou...
New
Further,
VIIUI , Only lhoae
,.., eallll texee due Lnlngton, Ohio EXCEPTING end
end pepbll •• ollhe 43714, on Me rob 7, RESERVING onto .the
the
dell ol .. ,. ehall 1M! 2002, 111 10:10 a.m., grantor&amp;
p1ld from
tho the following llnd(a) following dtecrlbed
end tenement(e), to ......I:
proceed• oltlll .....
VfH:
.
laglnnlng at the
Situated
In
the South .. tl corner of
LIN M. Mlclllllla
Townohlp of Sutton, the properly dlcrlbed
Attorney for Pl1lnutf
County of Melga, In Dud Book 253, .
Shllprlo I Flllly
Page 873 of tht
100 Wtet 81. Clair Stall of Ohio:
lelng In lleotlon Malga Counly Deed
AVI,
18, Town 2, R•nget2, Recorda; thence
a-MI Floor
Lol No. I, Sutton South so dig..... 45'
Cleveland, OH 44t13
Townlhlp, VIllage of Wtat, 218 IMI to lht
Racine,
Melge Eeat lfne of the
Counly,
0 h I o , Pomeroy Racine
lllglnnlngln the a ..t Rold (S.R. 124);
lint of the Pomeroy thlnCII along the Eatt
.1nd Racine Road, 513 line of Mid Pomeroy
lui from a point R1c1ne Road In •
which bllare North 38 Northeaot direction
dill'"' Welt In 1he 10 1111 to a point,
1ntareectlon of the thence North 80
'Pomeroy 1nd Racine deg,.et 54 mlnutoa
road with the WNI l!aot approximately
nne ot Section 11, 250 tut to the Eoll
alld point being 1to fine of lht property
fetl
from
the deacrlbtd In Doed
aouthweet corner ot Book 253, Page 973
Lot No. I In llotlon of the Melge Counly
18; till~• North 83 D11d
Recorda;
ctegt'He 41' E..t to • thence South 25
point, thenoe North 1 degreea I' Eut
c~~g,..e t' Wett, 84 1pproxlmately 45 IMt
lut; lhan..., North 53 along tafd Eaot uno
degrua 2' Eaat II to the place of
fMt to the SouthHat blglnnlng,
corfHir of M1rgaret oontelnlng .as acree,
Blnk'e lot; thence moreor1111.
South :12 deg .... 114'
The
above
&amp;Ill to ,_ to the deacrlptlon 11 bliNd
loulhuet cor111r of on prior written
w.K. Sm•rt'e lot; deacrlptlona and 11
thenoe Norlh · 23 not
•
aurvay
degt'He 8' Weal 208 dleorlpllon. It It the
IILLSI Ellnliftalt
IHI to a Dorner of Intention of the
llvo Thou11nds
NIDholll ltow'e land g1'811tora to ,...rve 1
Dtbt Froo. ont s:::~lln the 11111 line ol w. etrlp of property
. Progrom for A•
K. lflllrt'l lot; thence fronting lilly lui on
Call for o
North IS degrMa M' 11111 l'loute 124 •nd
1·100:431•817t old,
Qrolllt Uan110mtnl

l

Help Wanltd

And llllvllllltd fire1flllrll

11111 kvt lrlonor:
Olftoo Oornplt"'·

Aottldontltlontl Com1mortola

DUE TO OUR
CONTINUED GROWTH,
TURNPIKE OF
GALLIPOLIS HAS
· OPENINGS IN THE
FOLLOWING AREAS:

Wllntod.

running from the
Southwelllrly corner
to the Soulhweeterly
corner of the abovo
conveyed property,
Reaervlng to tht
Stile of Ohio,
how!IVII, ell oil, gat,

coal,

and

other

A . depoolt of o
dollaro
will
be
requlrod for each set
of
plano
end
epeclflceUono.
The full amount will
returned within thirty
(30) daye after receipt
of blda.
Each bid muot be
accompanied by either
• bid bond In an
amount ott 00% ol1he
bid . amount with a
eurely Altltlectory to
the eforeaeld Melga
County Commllalonera '
or by certified check,

mlner•l• with tht
right of entrY lor the
purpooe
of
proepectlng lor,
-loping,
producing
or
operating tor the
a1me, 1nd the right
of occupancy lnaollr
•• lh' oame Ia caahlere check, or
...enllal to 1uch lettor of credit upon a
proepectlng,
solvent bank In the
dlvaloplng,
amount or not less
operating
or than 10% of the bid
producing.
Alto, amount In favor of the
,...rvlngto the Stele lloreaald lrlelga
of Ohio, tht uta of County Commtaalonera
otreema flowing
Bid Bonde ehall be
through llld Ianda or accompenlod by Proof
abutting from the of Authority of tho
aeme, and 10 much official or egen1
of the blinks thereof olgnlng 1ha bond
•• may be ntcHNry
Bldt ohall be aealed
lor euch enJoyment and marked 11 Bid for
end protocllon of Southern Elementary
euch otretma from Pley·ground Project
aroalon,
end
moiled
or
contamlnallon or delivered to:
dlpoalt of otdlment.
Melgo County
Located at 47885
Commlaaloners
Stele Route .124,
Courthoull
Recine, Ohio ~577t,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Appraloal value:
45768
$42,000.00
AHIItltlon of blddero
10% cuh depoou It celled to all of the
or certified chock requirements contain·
required on day ol ed In this bid packet,
aele, belanca due particularly to the
upon confirmation of Federal
Labor
aele. Dud to laaue Standard• Provisions ·
upon payment of and Oavlo·Bacon
blllance. Thlo land(l) Wage~,
various
or
tenement(o) lnaurance require·
cannot be told lor menta, varloua equal
leaa than two-thlrdo opportunlly pro·
of· the appr1l .. d vlolona, end tht
value. Only thooo requirement for a
raef ••tete 1oxee due peyment bond and
and fiiiYiblo •• oltlll perlormenct bond for
date of tole ahalf be 100% of the contract
paid
from
the priCII,
proceedt of the Nle,
No blddsr may
wl1hdrew hit bid
LIN M. MlchHII
within thirty (30) deyt
Attorney for Plalntlll
after the actual date of
Sheprlo a Felly ·
the opening thereof.
800 Weol St. Clair
The Melgo County
Ave,
Commlealonera
SecondFIreoerve the right to
CftiVeland, OH 44113
,.Ject any or til bide.
(218) 821·1130
Jeff Thornton,
Pretldlnt
Sherlll ol Melgt
Melgt County
County
Commlaolonere
(1)t4, :12 I 28 3T
(111,15,22,2t,200a
(2 5,2002
Public Notice
Public Notice
NOTICI TQ

CONT~ACTOII8

Billed propoaalt
for ·the Puroh•u·
D • 11 v • r y
and
1n e11111 11 on
0f
epeollled Pl1yground
equipment at the
louthern
Local
lllmantary
Playground Project ,
Melg1 Counly, Ohio.
will be raoelved by the
Melge
County
Commlitlonera at
their oflloe at the
CourthouH, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45781 until 10:00
A.M, Thuredly, Feb. 7,
2002 •nd then at 11 :00
A.M. at ••ld olllco
opened · ond read
aloud
lor
the
following:
Purchott, Delivery
end lnatouallon of
v1rloua llama ot
playground equipment
• Speclflcallona ore
provided fn bid
packet.
Speclllcallona, ond
bid lormt may bt
eacured at the oHJc•
of Melgt Coun1y
Comm111tonera,

•

Th1
Annuel
Flnlnolel Report for
Iedford Townenlp wat
oompl11ed and mailed
to the Auditor of Sllll.
Thle l'llport luvall•bll
lithe o"rk'a home.
l1rb1r1 J. oru11er,
Cltrk
42774HelwlgRidge
8hldl, OH 45778
740:fi8.1244
(1) :12 lTC
------Public Notice

In compliance with
Amonded Section
311.t1 of tht Ohio
Lc.o Wtlglttl
Flevlatd Code, a lull
Cllosp FDA AppRIVed Dlol ~~s.
lnd complllo copy of
Pllonltrmlno, Adlpox, Xonloll, Ctd1os.. 1
tho annual financial
report altho VIllage of
Previous experience helpful.
Raclnt Ia avalloble for
State of the art equipment. ·
public lnopoctlon 11
Great working atmosphere.
the .office of the
Cltrk!Treuurer of
'"c o~er
a benefit nackage,
1
"'
"
"
Roclne
Vlllago,
including 40lk, meilical and
Municipal Building,
retire111ent benefits, a five day
Roolno, Ohio. The
work week and no Sundays, 1
office houro art
Monday through
Friday, tAM to 3:00 PM
and the tolophono
t! •II.
number lo 740-1411·
:1218
.
~
•ltweln tO a.m. A 7 p.m.
January I B, 2002
(t) 22 1TC
•------...::~:;;..-------' Courthouu,
Ohio 417tt, Pomeroy,
Phono t

Ill-: I \II. SPJ-:CI \ I.IST

No PhOne Calli PleaH
Clarence lllttlder

97 Attro Von, 156,000 mllol,
air, cru11o, Ill), PW, PL.
· AMIFM Ctseotta, d.,.l air
bags, AilS. nata 7, IIIIo
' now, Mull aolll 510,000
·• firm. (740)379-2134 1 • me.,.ge. ·

I

10

EAS'IEIIII- . Aiyall Holter 2 4&lt;6 6. Terri
Wolla 0 2·5 2, Sara Mansfield 2 1-3 7,

Public Notices In Newspapers, :

am • 11 pm (E8T)/7

1

40, llolgo 34
5
12 -

$6·$8
Per Hour

Otpt. P·87i

•

I

'

basket to bring Meig'l within
one point 27-28 with 5:50
left to phy.
,
Katie Robertson ended the
five unanswered points run by
slipping past her defender for
an easy hy in. Eastern now led
30-27 with four minutes
remaining. Robertson flexed
her muscles yet again under
the basket scoring her second
consecutive bucket, making it
32-27.
However, · an inadverten't
Eastern foul sent Lindsay
Bolin 10 the line to shoot 1and- 1. Bolin connected on
both attempts, placing the
Marauders just three notches
behind the Eagles, but solid
foul shooting by Robertson
and Wolfe sealed the victory
for the Eagles. Three points
were is dose as the Marauders
came in the fourth. A 2-for-2
effort by Robertson put the

what many thought they
could play. Without Stacie and
Whimey, somebody had to
step up and it was the entire
team." said Brannon.
In the JV contest, th e
Marauders compleied their
sweep of the Lady Eagles,
winning 19- 33. The Marauder charge was led by Xanthe
Smith with 9 points, foUowed
by Maria Drenner and Renee
Bailey · with eight p o ints
apiece. Morgan Weber was
the lead woman for the Eagl es
with 8 points.

NOW
HIRING

u.B LIc
NOT Ic E5

-"*' •

1

I

,

Eastern was now trymg to
dose the gap before the end
A I "*illll or .....,,.,.,.....,'Ciclolol of the half. A lob pass in to
wiling.
or ,.
.
poh, Mutor ~ o1oc&gt; Rober13on by Wolfe regts~~:='· tered two more poinh in the
;;;:::;;;:::;;;;;=-:::;;;::::;:;;::;:=.o;,. ·Eagles' score book. One for
:::
' two efforts at the foul-line by
Holter
and
Rob"rtson
brought the Eagles within

Dolollo

NOTICE TO
eplvent blink lin the '
COHTRAC 1OilS
amount ot nol Ieee
S. .lad propolllt than 10% of the bid
111111 • lor the Purcha••· - l i t favor ollhe
.'-"
•
,_..
• " (304)875-5l24.
Delivery of opeclllc lfOIIUid llllge -,,
·
emergency reacue - · · •
·
r•
~ '' •
equipment to the Commllelonen
~ .. ..
Rutlend
Fire
lid Bonclt ehlll be
D•p•rtment, Melge •ocompenlld br PNot
·· ·
'
County, Ohio. will be of Authority of the
1988 Buick Gtenc1 National . ..-lwei by 1111 Melge otrlclel or egent
County
el,nlnglhe bond.
75 000
40
!.·
Commlnlonere at
Ide lhlll be Hilled
their office 11 the ·lnd
lid for
, 1990 Ford Crown Vlctotlll; Courthou•, Pomeroy, R U Ill n d
FIre t~az:;
Vary Clean ·car, Allilng Ohio 41711 untll10:00 Department "J•.,• of
$2500. (740)245-5786. Hno A.M,
Thundly, Llr."Projeol · . - · Laavo Ms go.
J1n1111ry 31, 2002 lnd ll'lllllcl or deiiVINdto:
By virtue ole On~M'
: 1990 Grand Prix, 176,000 lhln.1111:00 A.M 111 CotnM1Igl •
County of 8e1e duly l1eued
1
. , mllea. $1000, (740)367· Hid office opeMCIm •e•Do"'ln,
out o1 lhe Court of
• 0009
reed 1loud lor the Courth-. Pomeroy, Common PI••• of
• • 11112 Buick Ragol 2 door f-J!8:
01 blcllllra Perry Counly, Ohio,
coupo, II opticn, 3800 VB,
l'urchlle-DIIIVWJ
In the ce• ol Chlrtlr
new tires, auper
of
E lllerg•ncy le Clllld to ell of the 0 n •
C red 11
. lion, apeclal price $3&amp;00.00 Hydreullc RIICUI raqul... mente
Corpol'lllon va, J1ck
~ 740-992-6719
Toole. s-clllcetlono contained In thle, bid E Clark at al
·
,..
· pecklt jlllrtlcularty to '
•
·•
d
Dllfendlnte upon a
· 1995 Satum 4dr. 4cyl. Good are provlclld In bid th
1 L b
1
• Condition Clean Doponda· PICkeL
•
•r•
·• or Judgement therein
' blo, ao..ioed
High
Speclllcetlone, •nd Sllnd•rda Provltlone rendtred and being
. Miloago. (304)937-2343
bid forme may be lnd P•vle•Becon C•• No, 01·CV·CI12
..
•ecul'ld at the offiCI W.gee,
virion In eakl Court · 1 wftl
~S: Sa~ ~L~ 1 :":~ of Melge Coul)ty ~=nil ttlrloue olllr for public .•••
AMIFMICD 5op Manual Commteelonera,
'....
'
II the Shlrlll'e OIIICII
(304)773:60oo ·
· CourthoUH, Pomeroy, equal opportul)lty of 1111 Malga Counry ·
Ohio 45781- Phon• 1 provlelone, 1nd" the Courthou•
.• 1998 Ford Eloor1, 65,000 740 • 112 • 2115 ,
A requirement for • Pomeroy, • Ohio,
. mlloa. 6 IPied lranomls· dlpolll of $ 0 dqlllre p1yment bond , end 45718 on Mlll'ch 7
r~~;.-'f,":"· Phone will be requlre4 for ~~=
2002, ••• 10;00 a.m.:
·• ·
- of pilUle lnd
.
the following land(t)
·; · ~.;~.rd
s~~ =lllclllone, check
bidder may ~~ tenement(e), to
· (740)379-235~
fMIYibiiiO _ .
withdrew hie bid
Sllullld In thl
. 89 Tarnpo, Ex aalia ,, Condl· The lull ·•mount will whhln thirty (30) deya lltlmi o1 Ohio· County
' 1101t 81,nnn Clofginal milea. returned within thirty •lllr 1M ectue!•ll ol, of M•"'• and In the
.: ' " NaW'Tiiii.rcniiM;' TI~:stor- (30rdlye alier reoelpt the opening thereof. Tow n': h 1 P
01
eo, AJr. Will Trade.fer Truck of blda.
The Melge County Columbia·
ol oqual •al.... (740)441· Each bid muel be Comml..lonere
· Situated In Section
0750
accompanied br either
lhe right to• 23 and 28 of aald
· . 92 Dodge l)ynaaly, $1500, a bid bond In an tejecl1ny or Ill bide.
Columbia Townlhlp
·. Lookl Good and Runs •mountol100%olthe Jeff
Thorn,t.on, and being Lot 12 1~
· Good. (7o10)441:0866
bid •mount with • Preeldent
!lolling Meadowa
IHI Men:ury Cougar XR7, eurety NUeleclory to Melge
Co~_nty Subdfvlalon of eald
79,000 mllu, auto, 3.6, the IIOreNid Malge Comrnlaalonere ~
s.ctlone ea Nl forth
loaded, red, sharp cor, aak· County
(1) 8, :15, :12 3TC ,,
In lht recorded plat
lng $5700, (740)992·2952 Commlaalonero or by
of ..ld eubdiVIalon In
97 Ford Ranger, 81K, certified
chick,
Plat Cabinet 7·A,
" $3495. 93 cavalier, 4 Door, c . .hlert check, or
Melgo Counly, Ohio
:: 981&lt;, $2195. 97 Grand Nr&lt;, 1-r ot credit upon •
Pill Recordt.
' 4 dool, 87K, $3895. 97 Lu.. mlna, 102K, $3895. 94
" Grand Am, 2 Door, 86K,
- $3995. 0111tro In llOCk from
· $995. COOK MOTORS.
(7oi0)4411-QI03
. 98 Cadillac catota, e cylln. dar, 4 door, 14,000 mileS,
· - ·l.oedod, AIC, l..oolhor, Sunroof,
Healed
Saell,
' . $17,500. Cell (740)446·

j

r

~ive.

hal{•
Mansfield kept the game
tied at 21 by with an e»y Jay
in the fint minute of the second half. .Jesaica Dillon hit
two straight buckea fiom well
ouiSide the paint, giving the
Eagles the lead for the first
time in the ball game. Mansfield poured some salt in the
wounds .of the Marauders
when she nailed her second
three point goal of the night,
giving Eastern a 27-21 advantage.
Meigs managed to get one
foul shot to fall after gciing
five scoreless minutes to malce
the tally • 22-27 in favor of
Eastern at the end of the thini
quarter.
Terri Wolfe was fouled to
start the fourth, she hit one of
two increasing the Eagle lead
to six points. The Mmuden
now knew it was time to. get

final score at .a-34.
"All our girls pbyed above

Hoy &amp; BrlaiiLWiro Tie
· Year 'Round DotMry
~~~ A;-·

_.
·~

-·Can

I

Lw------.,1.

-llollom

~II

6093.

.

windows. curity deposit. LeaH Op-

, Priced to Sail. Point · Pie~~Sant area. (304)675·3889
3 bedroom house for seta ask lor Rosemary.
on land contract, (740)992· F Sal
, ~A
5858.
or
e
on
.--.-man
1996 Mobile Home 2 ve.
lull
balhs, cOmptsle kitchen, tg.
4 BR, 3.5 Bath ranch With Covered 'Porch. Lot size

,

.

ranted lot Wllh 2K6 Will II, $550/ month, 1 month ...., Vacllnclea now.
pane

::..:=:::...=:..__ __

Amulng

I and Reference: No (740......13U8 or (740)256- Gas Forced Air Furnace

,

28x80 Doublewide slntng on of lown. Stts on 9 acrea.
thermal

Sunday.

and bowntown Dryer, $300, Skaggs Apptl- uswebothkllel

$3500 080, Mason WV, 1 bedroom, $3001 mo. plus · 1

(304)773-9151
1990 Flaotwood 2 bedroom
homt·CIII Charyl O ]40385-96.2! . 2002 Sunpolnte
3 bedroom/2balh 14 x 70mull sell-call Mike 0 740-

&amp;

I .

Porch, large front pot'Ch nlshed, Mason, all after

To Good Home Only! 4 opportunity employer.

Sl1urday

I ond 2 bedroom apart· Chapel ROid, PQnO(, Ohio. Mattf811, $100. Chest
menta turnllhld and unfur- (740)448:7444 t-8n·830· Drawers, $25. (740)446·
nlalieci _..., dopooll , . 91112. Free Estimates, Easy 9742
Ired' -~ 740financing, 110 days aame aa ;:.;.,;::.__ _ _ _ __
992• ca~. ViNI Muter card. Fibtfglall TI'\K':k Topper for ·
~ ' no
•
8
Dnve: • · - save alai.
• Ford f·150, Uka New,
$300.
can Mike al
1 ,·Bedroom Apartmenll, Wd Raclinor, Dart&lt; (~')875--•
S289 month. Depool &amp; Rei· Brown Oka. PuN Out Arm "-==c.:~=:,_-:-:-:=
erence. HUD Approved. T-. $175: (304)8115381!5 FirewoOd For- $35. Wil
(740)441-1519
Dellvor. (304)87&lt;HII87
washar, $95 • 0Ner
., • $95• ==;,:.:,:..;:,;,;_,;,;,;,;__
Frtl Gaa furnacft and Air
1, . \Court Street. 2 Bed·
~ 1 112 baths,- Elactrlc Range, $95, Relrig:. CondllioiiOI Elllmatos. Coil
with otovo and ralrigenltor. 01ator, $165, Waala/ Dryer (7401446., 308 Of HIOO·
QII:!S~ Porillnu, Clooe 10 584, S29S, Stack 21HXJ98. H you don't cili

12xoo •. 2 bedroom. newt bedroomhouse,stove,re- SchOOta

week old puppies, Mixed 4:30pm on January 23,

-~ &amp; Friday, 8am4:30pm. C - Thurlday,

·e a-

elaclrtc lumace, front &amp; raar lrigorator, olectrlc heat, fur· AfU. $5951 month plus de- ancea.

I

. tor fre&amp;. .offices.
re,
po s. ··~with-·-·-·
2 female rabbits
Resumes
refer·

WalkMya. L&amp;l SCrap Met·
~~Open Mr:nt.y, TueMiay,

32:48.

mostly lab. (740)446-9552

GIVEAWAY

::1

For Dralno, DriVeways

laQt Manor and Ri¥erlide For Sate: Kilchen cabU1eta- (740)446-7300

~-~~ In Mlddlepor1. Aflprox. 20ft base and-·
Fi6m 1278:$341. can 740: dark ook wood, countortop
99,2:6064. Equal -•lng and oink. Aaklng $300. cal
opportuniliaa.
(740~14 01 (740)446-

encas will be accopled al
tho Cheshire office, 8010
Free to a good home. 6 North State Route 7, until

r~-------·I~=m;.~~ .,:;~ug~

www.gltl G•· •
NEW AND U8ED STEEL
~ ~-- ......, Reba

34o

JBO.OOO
!'so.)S45'
·

ro

g,

2ba free delivery &amp; aolup. ln 1
llolHs
0 -FOR ...,...
I ··~
hou H fl na nclng to qua..•
buyoro. (006)474·4391 or '
(006)4747568 aner 5
1 •3 Bedrooms Foracloaed
Homes FIOITI $199Ji.lo. 4%
1970
Champion
12x60
2
Down
bedt
$3 000 080
, 30 vT&amp;anl at a' .5~
.,.
C811 ~~75-2470 . . APR. For Llallngs, 800-319· 3323 EKI. 1709.
1973 mobile home lor sale

L

•

6491.

t!i

LoH 10 p!Hinda- 200
pounds easy, quick, Fut
o..matlc Rooun.. 100%
448 0390
ment.
For Sale: Racondllloned Nalund, Or. Rooommaudod.
. . - ·dryers and rwfrig: 'MI&lt; Moul fREE ~·
Nice 2 bad~ apartment endOf'l. 'Thompeons ~I·
"'" 1
.
for
rant,
$300/monlh,
Jackeon A
(7"""~ ·1982
7
5300/dopoolt, Middleport. ance.
•
ve- ~-· $ · Full ~·- Box
~-. 75.
~
74C)l591 -o649 , i'40·5911- nue, (304)6•5-7388.
34eei '
I
I
.
202 'C:Iart&lt; Spring a(ld Matt.... $100.
.,...,,
CU.. Slzo Box Spring and

80 Acres Henderaon on
New Four Lane ellnloraec&gt;

~with

o;ctroom apartmenllat Vlf.

Mmefn(740)
1 Bedroom Apart~

I(~oil)937·2518l'iiY - ·

slon,

(740~7267
W I. w rl&lt;
C odl
ust an. 6It o ap-

please leave message.

--

TURNED DOWN ON

~

Free

I

·
One
(304)937-2518 (304)545Inti &amp; ale oyalem.
ml- 64g1
nuto off Route 7, but IIIII prlvate. (740)985-3981

health insurance and pen- SOCIAL SECURITY /881?
Bass or Guitarist and Singer sian plan. Experience deF
WI 1
Needed lor Metal Band. sired but not nacessary. No ..88
n
(740)446:7621
·
H! • •
1h
Beaullclan, FT &amp; PT Help
Needed. Paid Vacation/
-riy Wage Vs. Commls-

U•::::s .

(740)441-o968.

Lurs &amp;

:n•roomroom
New cadral heat: tion wilh city water. $80,000

EOE

your own pace Jay Clark's 675·1429.

;:;,

day... Prima Shopping Cerr For sale by owner: Nice bl· ~
AOIEAGE
,
tor Space Available AI AI· home on I aero near
fordable Rata. Sprlnu Valley Chootor. Three bediOOOI, 80 Acres Handerlon on
Plaza, Cal 740-448-0IOI . )"'" .~Ills, "':;;',"rn=· New' Four Lane allnlerMC·

Sa1urdays and evenings.
_ _ _...:::;::.,_ _ _ Bena1its include paid tuition

•

j

lntorth•m &amp; Colemon goa,
olci•_.L~
......~
-..
-·--•
pomp I I i - W. COllY a
COITipleW Nne of Moti..
hoont poliO &amp; • Ill-.
SENNETT'S HEATIIIO a
COOUNG (740)4411:M11
or ~~ 1011

·

~:.%'.%0.
Gany Utlitles Paid, Shared Balh, Washora, Dryora, Rangea.
Smilh at S~lth Buick p~ $1351 month. 919 Second Refrigrators, Up To 90 Days
Crown City. 3 Bedroom~ 1 I
h
(740}446· ~'18.: (7~)446--3945
GLBIUll:eedl We Sal New
112 Balhs. Owner Flnanc'"U ~~ 2 or P one
"'~""• 11 1 1 nd 2 Maylog Appllanceo, French
wHh
$6,000
down.
,.,.,-• v ng. a
Clly Mayta 740-:1-16-7'195.

Somer- detail-oriented, committed
(740)441 -1108
ryn
to e)lcellence in patient Start Your · Business To-

free 1-800-766-2623 aKt "' :;.,.d.; Nursing Can lor care, sell-motlvalad and
1621 .
East Main Street
possess good communtcaCooMIIe Oh
. lion skills. Approximately
ANNouN&lt;:FMFms
(740-007·l156)
3ShrSiwk, includes some

rLw------··I

t!e'ga

Ftone,

I

~- _,.., •"'"
r
FDf Concfelt, Angle, Cl'\anoo
~:urantMPro- ~um1shed Efficiency, All Appliancee: Reconditioned nel, Flat Bar, S1e11
1, .

emodel for

r = c - - - --

r~ Rmut:~ I

1

OWIEAS

I

riO·

p._,..,..

.Largo-·

fessional Discreet &amp; Conli· wages and opponunltles for vidu~l for a career In a d)'· mone thfou h'th&amp; maH unlit
dentlal. 6pm to 6am. advancement If you would nam•c work environment
~
ti ted the

Why wa111 Start meellng 4.00 or call Kath

~

IEAUTIFUL
APART· 2' bodloom aparlmOnl In
IIENf8 AT IIUDOIT .,...., ~ comp1e111y teCES AT JACKION E&amp;- n ' ' I t $350.00 o rnoolll,
JIIT£8, 52 • . - DIM $250.00 dopool~ . 74(!:11481015
toto 304-e'/5-5548
nn
S297 to $383. WII&lt;IO 2IX!5 or 740-992-2043
3 Bedroom on Route 2,
.
.._.. I I110Yt8e. c.ll 740(304)875-5332
Commercial Building · lor ~25118. Equol Hooalng
3 Bedroom, 2 Bllh, So4 up Rent. Cedar - . Gallpo- Oppo.tunily.
JluiN8s
on Prl\lale
Take llo, OH. (740)2~1
Houmo.o
~-~-;
over payments. (740)446· For Lease: 3000 to 5000oq i!uutllul Dowo-. &lt;li&gt;t-, 3
GoOIJs
c/o Gall!polla Da•ly Tn.bune, ..,
UITVIUUI"'II •
• 3583.
ft office on RetaJI Space. BR. Nice ao.ta, s.ng., -.
.
825 Thud Avo, Galbpolls,
.
nd
Ave.
Modom
.Real·
Naorty2,000
352 2
OH 4~1 .
INOTICEI
39R, 2.5 Bath, Noce Lot room.. Walk· In Yaull can oqearo 1811.. $8001 month, 2 yeer old au- Mattf811
.
.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- Wilt consider lend contracl R
·Anti· ~Kelly (740)4:18-9961
Only $100. (740)4:18-1822

Male Escorts.. Prompl Pro- Lila Insurance, competlllvo p1actlee Is seeking an lndl- ~ know and NOT 10 aond 9887. Localad In PatrioL
.

==
~ -~

Lor•._~_RENr
__.,JI r

Will Clean out Garages, 3 bedroom houao, 1-112 6000 Sq. loot
buildings, hou&amp;es, ato. Have bath, ·2 car garage, 299 alorago wilh 14,000 oq. 1ao1
Full alzo 1ruck. No truh. Wright Stree1. (740)992· of ..... Call ERA
(304)675·7996 (304)675- 3648
'
Town &amp; Countty Reel e.

Moon Light Escorts. Atten· cellent benelits that Include Optomelr•c Technlc•an·:· lNG CO recommends that with down payment and
lion Ladles . Full Service Heallh Insurance, .401K, State-of-the-art optometnc
u do bUsiness With peopfe good relaroocea. (740)379-

(7ol0)388-1799.
.

s. ..

~~·~·~·E·~-~..~·~-E. . ~~~~~~~§5~

55

F,.. IIIIa- 2 donl!8ye &amp; a po:

i

fotMuttcntMII
. . OIIIol
.,_mn:P
a.,............ onlf . ..._...,._
ec:.t·ONo....,,......
,-••ns:H
.................
rtghtto . . . ,.....
. . . . ......,
.... .., ....
_,._.Of....,..thlt
hMtMP''P I 101
OIM d t i ' . . . Col: ' , ........................... . . . . .

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Jnclude Complflte
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
•rnclude Phona Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

;'.")87t:,4 lor

I•

~

~•

Mall To : Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

LIVrstOCK

__

~

• No ·COmmercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Anlmais
. Or Garage/Y,rd Sales • Limit 3 .Per Person

Thursday for Sundays

:.~r...:

$75.

!"!'":..

~

Private Party Ado Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced

......

(740)379-2757.

:;:-:: i

r.
Display

'=.

: ~ lJit Truck Fork1, $50. mporMLS-.ol
~ - 10"1&lt;12' . . - plpa, aloo

675~1333

(304)

with :30 mnainin&amp; in busy. DaVis hit a short jumper
half. A~ rum~ to start the Marauders
allowed a wide open Mans- engines.
Then
Mindy
field three-pointer, which tied Chancey punched the acc elthe game at 17 all for the fint erator by hitting a three point

I

'l

The O.lly Sentinel• Plge B 3

three

.
D

'

Register

.,

·-·

Mlddllp~ Ohio

_the

cac-

..

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Pomeroy,

•

.!1

•

�..

--A.,•••

.... ...

-

,.

l

TuMUy, Jan, 22, 2002

P•ge 84 • TM O.lly s.ntlnel

5 1\lnday, Jan. 22, 2002

. PQmeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5

ALLEYOOP

.

NEA

'

PHILLIP

'

IIIII bfoll .
Nld!IQIIII ngue

··.

·.

,
•
•
.

.i

..

,. .

,•

ATLANTA

Hill's Self

THRASH~Ft&amp;-Piaced

eow.n on !rPM ruarve.

F Jeff
All ed 0 Mike
11

Stor~ge

Weaver 11om Chlclao ollhl AHL
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS-Promoted
John McNamala from PI ell too oal ICOUI 10
dl~ol hoclcey optt'alione.

FLORIDA PANTHER!l-AcliYited RW Pavel
Bur• from injured .. Aecalled 0 Bred
Notion from ~l'lhev of 11141 AHL
LOS ANGELES I&lt;INGS-PIKad C Eric
Belanger on Injured ,_rva, rerroactlva to Jan.
16. ~lied LW Ryan Flinn and D Jere Kar·
alahtilrom Mancheeter of th~ AHL.
PHOENIX COYOTEs-Recalled L'h Jean·
Guy Trudel and C Jaaon Juperw from Spring·
tract.
field
of lhe AHL.
·
NaUonal Footbell Laaaue
TORONTO
MAPLE
LEAF&amp;-Announcad
Keith
KANSAS CITY CHIEF$-Signeil CB Reggie
a med·
Stephens, K Lawrence Tynes and DT Devin Acton, assistant coach, haa
leal laave of abaanOS. Recalled Karel Pilar
Wyman.
OAKLAND RAIDERs-Announced lhe retire- from St. John'• of the AHL Aaslgned C Ale~ei
Ponikai'OI/Sky to St. John'a.
'
ment o1 G St~e Wisniewski.

·'

Shade River AG service
"Ahead In service"

~II(.
llaclna. ONo &lt;15771

35537 Sl. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
Equine 12 •
.12% Swwtltonl fled ................ 15.001110

740 1111···

, MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
-g7 Beech st.

middleport, OH

ramenv fllles
1111160 2171

fur='

Doers..._~-.,._, ....,.

Elrllllirds stilt
"·,1
....,

[740) 992-3194
. 992-6635

DIPOYIU

L\1\li\I'S

PIBft

All Makes Traclor &amp;

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
C~·IHParts

I ., , ,

HOUSE
PIIIDTIRG

BUILDERS 1nt

Free estimates:

FREE ESTIMATES

maintenance

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

(740) 94"-1521
..-

740·992·7599

Coolville, OH 45723

740·667-0363
WEST SHADE
BARBERSHOP
·Ctoled Ju. 30, 31ot,
FOb. hi ·.
Open

Tl!e, Frt 10.!:80 p.m.

.. . !!at.li:JO ~ 12:00 .
GeOi'p k. Voc.

II&lt;! ( I Ill'

, Spedal!zlpr Ip·

'I

Additions

'

"

Owner: Terry Lamm

(740) 992·0739

~~~

High&amp; Dry
SeU·Storage

•Gtra~s

· 'FREE ESTIMATES

'"you'~ E~\\~ ~COOKIE, ""~ ..-[ Tf\()(X,I-I.\ YOJ SNO YOJ "''
.:

.·. yqt

••
•I
•

IN

••

l

lllbeceiNnt II·

!118. YIU slloliN lie

• c,;ood sekctloo ohew &amp;used lim
• 011 ehnge $18.95·
We stock all tDa.Jor brands
Mike HUt
Owner .

104 Filth Street, Jlaclne, Ohio

I

ttnilgteus.

HERBIIliFE
IDDEPEDDEDT
.DISTRIBUTOR
lose 2-Bibs.
748-992-7036
Pd. 1 mo. 1110

,Advertise
In,this
space for $1 00
per month.·

1
'I
•

't

rqff a spade in hand,

.1.;

.........

·: . PEANUTS
,~

'229,00*
' FREE INST-'LLATION
~ FREE IN HOME ESTIMATE
• FULLY WELDED
• !0 YEAR WARRANTY

MAV8E IF I WALK AROlJND

I WONDER WIU\T I CAN
00 TO MA(!:E TloiAT LITTLE

n!E ~OOM A 8IT ... l'lL 8ET

RED-WAtll.ED 61RL NOTICE ME ..

SME NoriCES ME:PiiOW ...

r----------·... .
ESPECIAUV AFTER r GET
Mlf SLEEVE CAU61o1T IN
PENCIl 5MARPENER..
·
T"E
"

I

..

1-800-291-5600

.._,

.I

'I
'I
. I
' '
. '
'

\Vt•dnc..'!lday , Jau . 2J, 21t112

An ...· ud~.·avm \'o11'vc bc..·c. · n
to}·ing with for 'a .lung time
may lind the way~ :md meam
in thf' )'!;'aT .alw.llf Ln bring a
~~ll.:(t.'5~fu1

nmchuion tu yonr
pm jec.·t. It may turn m1t to he
vcf).- HtliliH.'ially rc.•wanli11~.
mL'Ilt~ :1r~ Jlmllihi L' tuday il
rdu d~o•vmc ymu dlhm and
c.•tH.'rKit.•t tn nt:mc.•n ur ~itu :l­
tium Lh:lt L';\11 ~o•nh :mcc vuur
UHitL'ri"l ~~nll'ity . Aqu:J .I 'i u~.
tr~o•ilt ~·~atr~df to a hirthduy
~itt. SL'tlll ftH )'tHtr /Htru-

to h~tru -tir11p h. ~·/n 1hh .
ncW!I),a~,~·r. P.O . Uus 17~H .
M"rr.l)' 1·1111 Stillion, Now

&lt;'

Yurk, NV
~tnu.•

101~(,,

)'nm Zmli11l:

Ut:

Sllrl'

tn

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i'ISCES (l'ch. 211-Mnrch 211)
U~ l'Xti'L'IIh'ly ~dL'l' ti\'l' tudll)' whtm you m"' )'mlr indi.
u.llil,fl in dirc"· titl~ ym1 tn mkc

••

Cellular

..,...

Jeff
Ins.
,,. Warner
.
/,

ttc.'tion Cllt
(~1111li1y

'I'Cc.:lth·

wdJ he 11\IH~
11111E Lh:m lJimntlry .

i'-'\ll''·
Ull)Hlr•

·

Alt.II!S (Mnrch 21-AI'ril i'J)

.

..

bou-

25 Doing
notltlitg

ze Holot

21 Alng
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river
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31 Hlatory
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(2wda.)

41 Elnpllttlng
50 llade
halle
52 Fruh procluct
53Actreea
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54

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luls Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
peopte, past and pruent. l5ach letter _in the ciDher stands tor anolher.

.

'OT

· Todays clue: X equars Y

XAWYR

Zj..NK;

OAWCJ.'

VPN

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NFYONLLN

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "If a man hasn't dlacoYered something
lllal he will die for, he isn't lit Io IIYe."- Martin Luther King Jr.

O fo1.1r
Reorronga letters of
scrambled words

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below to form four simple words.

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QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

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4 Marino

34 Luplnool

I Uatento
37 Mountain
10 Hlrnlliltyan
14 :v.~ 38
41
11 = ·lumpy

with , to
return
·Iub dummy
t tl
0 R E
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Handyman to matron "Re4
qucen: ;uff ao~th~~
move the garments before'! work
spade, ·go to the dub '--'--1.--L-1.-..J ~ on the closet" Without thinking,
ace, and ruff the last r-..,.------~ she shouted, "You m.ean I'll have
spade. Now cash the
F I T c E N
to.-- . •· . . my clothes?"
6
;~cc-king of diat)tonds,
Complete the chuckle quoted
L-1..._J..,_J..,_J..._L._;,
by filling in the mi.ssing words
and exit with your last
vou develoo 11om Slop No. 3 below.
diamond.
East, who Is down
to Q-1 0-9 of heart!,
must ruff his partner's
'witincr -- both losers
·disappear on the same
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
trick -- and return
Cl1oice- Woman· Drink - Tricky· CHIMNEY
heart, taking the fiTwo
old friends were discussing the weather. "Last
nesse for you!
· winter," the first friend announced, "it was so cold I had
to break the smoke off the CHIMNEY!"

. ;.

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·9 92,5479

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not waste a dununy

JANUARY22I

VINYL IEPI.MEMENT WillOWS

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21 Snort

1
2
.
3

27 Tafedo

entry for the heart fi-~r
ncssc. Instead, play a
dub t"o dummy's jack,

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FACTORY DIRECT ;·
PRICING
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-

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~ith the 4-0 trump
., break, there seem to
COMPNC:£0 \0 W\-\/\1 I {'..\E:
be two unavoidable
. YE::.\E.~OII-..Y, n\1":&gt;
losers: one hear! and
one JiJmllnd. llut if
1":&gt; D.IE:\'\NG! · rG::~L
, you can win 12 tricks •
you can aflord two
· losers! If you arc to
collect 12 tricks,
which 12 must they
be? Assuming t)o
more foul l)j-eaks, as
you have only one
spade, two diamonds
~111d three club:s on the
side, you need six
trump tricks. How do
you get those? lly
rutling spades. So, do

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If your wellllt Is

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Col~D"&lt;'S

Flnandng &amp; 90 Days
Same As Cash Available

(740) 992·347

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THE BORN LOSER

~!!!!!!!!.....!£UJ..!112..i!!!.l L---7~122/TF~N •·

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rcspomc. South continues with a comrol- ·
bid (cue - bid) to
sound out North
about a slam. North is
happy to s)ww his

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· RemOiteilng
: Stop ,l.. Compare

(740)

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for an iuitial posilive

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BARNEY

...

Roofing, Decks
Remodeling,
Drywall, and

20

When. you are in a
suit co ntract, usually ·
""it p~ys to count your
losers. However, it is
a!So a good . idea to
tally, your winners -especially if-you arc itt
a slam, when you
cannot alford many
losers.
In this cxampl~.
you reach six hearts.
After winning the first
trick with the spade
ace, you &lt;·ash the
heart ace and arc disappointed to sec West
discard a diamond.
How would you continue?
·
North ,.s raise to
three hearts promises
5-7 points: some ·val-

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Wolfe Home

COMMOOALoMIESim.~t

Wfll
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Dealers
}000 SL Rr. 7 South

a·I9ni

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Middleport, Oh 45760 ·; .

Insured

......

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Vulnen~ble: Eaii·Wnlt

(740) 992-1705
213 N. Second Ave.

Q

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.. K 43

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mEIGS mftSSftGE
THERIIPY

Interior &amp; Exterior

New Homes' Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
, Replacement

Windows • Roofing

...,Proor-essl'"'ue tDPilne
Thursdlys
ProgreSSive
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[18'110' 610'11201

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Serving Ohio and '9!.V.

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tonight was another key factor ii,J the.
Feb. 1-Mareh I ·
33795 HU.nJ Rd.
game. De:rna '. Pul)iris ·. wp.$ IPe~~C.ular" Shop wlU bt rej hours
both offensively apd defensiv~ly: Brboke ·
Pommy,Ohw
&amp;daysMarehht
Kiser
made
a
ctu~ial',p!ay
in
our
c~me­
Sorry ror your lnconv.
from PlgeB1
back ·.and Tara · PiCkens came off the
!185·3616 Chris
rebounds. Freshman Brooke Kiser had bench when our posts were in foul
a huge steal, a lay-in, and three-point trouble. All did theit jobs wen:~
Several times Southetn feJi .behind
play that ·helped Southern in its comefour
points,. but the lady .Thmad6ei
back bid.
Vinton County was also well-round- never gave up. They jusf.kept·~oiiOOg&gt; .
thte~ ..
ed in its offensive assault. The Vikings Rachel Chapnian dnine~.
· were led by Beth Allen who tossed in 15 from the corner; to pulFSHS :tti With,i#':.
points in a great offensive effort for the one, then_after a 'Pridc.ni.ore p6si \hive,
Lady Vikings. Mel Jones added 12 Pullins drained a six-lOot juniper that
points and had nine rebounds, while cut back into the VC lead 49"48.
After a couple traded tree throws,
· Holly Pridemore added -eleven points
Southern took the lead for the first time
and nine rebounds.
Southern never led until the final when at the 1:19 mark Brigette Barnes
round. The Lady Tornadoes got off to an drained a three pointer, the store 55-53.
awful start, much to the credit of a trap- . That came after a big rebound by
MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
ping 1-3-1 half court trap by the Vikings Barnes on the defensive end of the
, and a solid match up zone in the half- floor.
Roc ky R Hupp. Agent
Southern
had
a
good
defensive
stop
court game. Southern fell 18-2 early
Box 189
before Pullins hit one at the end of the on the other end with.Katie Sayre grabMiddleport. Oh1 o 45760
bing a key rebound. Amy Lee was
quarter, 18-4 Vinton County.
Local 843·5264
Meanwhile, Mel Jones (four points) fouled with 48 second! left, both missed
Mr.dicare Supplement; Life [nsurance;
and Beth Allen (seven) were having hey- both ends of the double bonus. Barnes
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
days against the Tornado defense, getting kept thing1 . alive wiih a loose ball
Dental, Retirement,
some key assists from Jewett and Sowers rebound and Lee was again fouled with
Penslon &amp; 401K Rollovers;
in scoring both from the paint and 36 seconds left.
Mortgage; Mnjor Medical
Lee hit both ends this time for a 57against the Tornado nuisance press.
• Nursing Home .
Southern fell to 22-4 early in the sec- 53 lead with 36 seconds left, but VC got
ond round, but the first quarter adjust- a quick score when Cindy Cox hit a folments started to kick in for Southern. low-up jumper offaJewettjumper, 57WJe~t•s
Pullins and Barnes had a couple driving 55 with 24 seconds left.
Southern inbound the ball and Lee HAULIN4Jan4
jumpers halted by fouls and hit one free
throw apiece, then Pullins ignited was again fouled quickly. Lee missed
EXCAVATING
Southern with a pair of three pointers, both ends, but Ashley Dunn got the
otlaullng oUmaatana
and Katie Sayre had a couple follow up long rebound and big save in the corner oQravtl• Sln.d •Topaoll
jumpers that cut rhe Vinton County where she · too was fouled and missed
oflli Din oMuloh
lead to 22-18.
both with 18 seconds left.
Vinton County quickly went down
Southern's second quarter def~nse was
very intense and its full-court press floor, where Sowers missed a long three
helped force
numerous Viking and Dunn grabbed the rebound and
turnovers. Eberts and Pullins traded passed to Barnes who was fouled.
buckets and Amy Lee came on to hit a
Barnes hit the second of two with
key jumper before the half with South- . eight seconds. Barnes and Lee had a
ern back in the game, trailing only 26- double block on Hayes thn!e point .
attempt. VC rebounded and put up
20.
another
miss, but time ran out on the
Southern gave up a couple quick
. buckets to Jones .and Allen early in the SHS win, 58-55 .
Southern had 31 rebound! (Dunn ·9,
third frame to trail 30-20, but from that
point on S~uthern began its victory Barnes 8, Sayre 6); 22 turnovers, 14
march. Pullins hit a three pointer to steals (Lee 6, Chapman 4); 15 assists (Lee
knock it to six points, then Brooke Kiser 5, Sayre 6), and 20 fouls. Vinton County
had a steal and lay-in that drew the foul. had 36 rebounds Gones 9, Priden1ore 9);
Kiser drained the free throw to cut the 24 turnovers, six steals (Allen 2, Hayes
lead to 32-29 and from that point on 2); ten assists Gewett 4), and 29 fouls.
Vinton County won the reserve game
Vinton County had irs hands full.
Jewett nailed a three pointer for the 53-,31 after breaking ~way from a 21-18
Vikings to push the lead back to six, but lead at the half. Amanda Jl.adcliff led
that was the largest lead Vinton County VC with 19 points, while Jessie Caudill,
had from that point on. Barnes nailed a .Brittany Sowers, and Susan Eberts each
three to retaliate, and Rachel Chapman added eight. Joanne Pickens led Southhit couple big jumpers from the lane. ern wjth 9 points, Susan Brauer had
When the dust had settled, Vinton eight, Brooke Kiser siX, and Ashley .
,
·. ,
County led by just one 38-3 7 at the end Roush five. ·
Southern hosts 'Trimble Thursday·and
of the third frame.
goes
to Meigs Monda):.
·' ·
"I thought the third quarter was a
crucial point in the ·game. We have
come out and played poorly the last
1ou111tm Sl, VInton CountY 55
18
8
12
17· - 55
three third quarters we have played. So, VInton
.4
18
17
21 - 58
I challenged the girls to ke.ep it close, ·VINTON COUNTY .,. GlngorGHIOOO. KovtoJewett 1'
t-2 4, Me1Jonoo6 D-2 t2, KnatiHayeao tl-w 6,Cindy
because the fourth quarter has been our Cox
1 1-4 3, Holly Prldemora 4 3·5 It , Beth Allen 6
quarter all year long. The girls all accept- 3-4 t s, Hayley Sowera t o 2. susan Eborte 1 o 2.
19-1 14·28 55.
ed the challenge, and played very TOTALS:
SOUTHERN - Rachel Ch...,..n 4 O-Il 9, BrigeHe ,
intensely during this span," said Coach Barna 3 2·5 to. Deana Pulllrla 7 t-2 18, Amy Lee 2
6-17 10, K.alill Sayra2 0 4, AlhiiY Dunn 0 4-12 4,
Scott Wolfe.
Tara Plclcona 0, llrooflo Kl..r t 1·1 3. 10TAU: 19
Wolfe added, "Out starters always give 14-37 58.
Three-Point !loall - yC I (Kay!« Jtwtll): Southem 8
it 110 percent. I think our bench IPuftlna
3, Bamot 2, Ch•pmon).
· ·

Southern

Crete

-

·-··

F ...
A K 1$ t
•

free Estimates

u
wii1111=:.
44 lie Ill-

11 .......... 51 %A

PIIIV«lrk.
RepiKetr u II, • WIIU
and Driva • Stencil

=

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11 ...,_,

• Foolen, W.O., Slept•

12% SWwl Hone fled .....;......... 14.40150
Hunlerl Pride 21% dog food .........SUIIISO
Economy a..t 12% atoc:k fled ..... St.711150
Trace Mlntrll81ockt ................... ;l4.751100
$1
11., 'La C ....,.

:

4 GrM8y

aJII(IDJ/II.O(I '

lwaatStull

give the Steelers a difficult-to-defend
asset that perfecdy accompanies their
dramatically improved passing offense.
Before he was hurt, Bettis was averagfrom Page81
ing nearly 100 yards through 11 games.
"He'll definitely be the freshest man '
something you have to deal with."
in
rhe playoffS when he comes back;'
Offensive tackle Wayne Gandy csti: mated about half the Steelers get Gandy said. "For a man like him who is
1 painkilling injections before a game, but
driven, who already is a h•rd runner, if
said most get nothing more than the he gets a chanc.e to play Sunday, he'll be
equivalent of ~-to- 4 over- the-counter running 100 miles per hour."
The Steelers got some welcome medpainkilling tablets.
"It's nothing but liquid Advil, but it ical news when tests showed no· ligadoesn't tear up your. stomach," he said. ment or cartilage tears in linebacker Earl
"You have to understand it's-a game of Holmes' sore left knee. Holmes also
pain. It's a hard, reckless game, and it expects to play Sunday.
"The doctor said it will be sore for a
(the shot) is really just to smooth those
couple of days, but other than that,
little irritating things that come up."
everything
came back great," said
The Steelers went on to beat the
Ravens 27-10 without Bettis. He insists Holmes, the Steelers' leading tackler.
· Holmes was injured Sunday, but not
he will play Sunday against New England, saying, "I could have played about in the customary way -· safety Brent
5 or 6 o'clock (Sunday) after the shot Alexander jumped on his back in celea'"
bration after Holmes caused a fumble.
wore ou.
"He caught me off guard; and that's
Amos Zereoue ran for 63 yards and
when
I got a little twinge ii) there,"· ·
two short touchdowns as Bettis' replacement. However, Bettis' presence would Holmes said.
,,

1 , .....'1

P/l .r

Puzzle

mil_.

ACROSS

ALDER

LW

Tlmo Parwalnen lo Clneinnltl olll!e

been81van

'

...

NEW YORK METS Acqul..-cl RHP Jell D'AmIco, Jelomy Bumltz, INF Lou Collier, INF Marte
SwMney lnd CUh from Mllwauk•, and INF·
OF ROM ~ and RHP Cr.JQ HouM from
Colorado. Sent LHP Glendon RUIOh to Mil·
waukee, *'&lt;! INF Todd Zeile, OF Benny
Agbayanl, INF Lenny Halria and cuh to Col·
orado. Milwaukee alao recal~ed .OF Ale~
Ochoa from Colorado. Signed OF Tony Taraa·
co to a minor league oontract.
Natlonallllilekalball Maoclallon
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS-Placed F Lamond
Mu~on . lhe Injured list. Acti~ated G Trajan
Lan
from lhe injured list.
LO
ANGELES CLIPPERS.,Signed G
Eldridge Recasner to a aeoond 10-0ay con·

ANAHEtM"::I~~Ia~~ ~

Cro&amp;~word

hnhl wh~o•n l'11'l'UI11•
:~~t.ml·~"·"·,,l l ti,r it tlld.l)'· It' it

-·

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b~o'"'ll lll\1 ~ IIC~~·~~.\1)' f(H Ylltl W
b l't'Uilh' .1-H'rlivc in nnh.·r w

r'FN

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lkri\'C that tu whid1 you're
~o.•ntitlcJ, Jon't h"·' it :Hc 'tu du
~i,).

TAURUS (April 2fi-M"Y
20) ~~ ThL•rc's a gllod ch;\11'1:
)'~1\1

could

with a

bcl' Oil!C il vi~imwry

~,urpo~t.&gt;

to&lt;i:ly . Y lHI

kind uf .1

prL·~cnt.Hion

todny,

be ~1 1 re to isul:ltl" the kl'y playe-n so wh.lt you h.1Vt" 1u ~ay
dm·~ nnt )I:L't lu ~t ill tr.m ~ l:ttion .
Y&lt;ndl ht• dvn :11nito.' w it h the
rit1;ht I'L't'pk .·
.
llllllA (~ L·pt. 2J-O t.: t. 2.') -

)ook

- Yuu ntuld bv i11 fur .1 plca!l-

wilrn prup~·rly
motivatL•tl , anythiHg i~ possi-

'ant ~ urpri~L· 1od.1y wht'\1 yo u
di't'&lt;J \'L'T the wul'k you're doin~ ti.1r .mothL·r \Viii :1l so pay
di\'i(\cmh en rem. It l!nys tu do
n puud _jl1h.

l'OUibilitk~ fl)r HICCC~5

~.,.nud, b"•r.1u~c

l&gt;lt.
t;EMINI (May li·J"nc 20)
-~

The fun is in the rlm~L' !Ur
pHI tud:1y . Althoull,ll your
1'f0b0lbiliric' rl)r ~ u ~c~·~5 louk
~ou ..l. yu~,·u b~ mnrc int~r­
l'm·d i11 ~Cri\'inr fi.1r n ~ua'l
thtm in th~· :u:tiU1 liL'hil·\'t'llll'tH
uf it.

CANCER Uunc li·J"ly
22) ... Tlm~l.l with whnm yOu
~"' ln\'ulwd tml.ty wllll1li\'C a
~tmn~ ini1'"'11C.'t.'
~~~~·11tnl

un y~1ur
attitud ..•. lf ,th ..·y :lfl'

.,.O·r~·Ul'f', )'tHI'II

b.:,

UIU.· ·

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w~l .

LeO Uuly

2.1·1\•i~. 22) ••
Mu~t ul )'IHif tilth' :md !H t ~U·
tinn wi ll lw ~Pl'llt nn duin~
thin~~ fur 11thl'l~ tud:1y ill,ll\hl
of th)illt-~ t4 1r rolll'~~·lr. ~hnv­
C.'\\'r. tilt' thl•t•r plt·.t~u rc ynu
.,eN rwm it will h~ r~'W;Jrll
~.·nm1~d1 f(,r ytHL
VIU..(iO (A tl~ . .2.'-S~·pt. 21)

-- If ynu

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tll .lk l' W II W

(Oct . 24-N,ov.

SClli~I'IO

2.2) -- lJ~i ll!o' l." llll~idL'T,lfC ,111d
tliplumatic will \'lay to yolll'
~tren~th~. not ~ c tnl(' t lmm
th~m. l'~npl ~ with wltnm

ym1'U hH\"1.' dL•.1l i n~.t will n:cOt-r:llizc yuur t·lmu .111d n·~p~:c:t
yo11 ,lllthL' mnrl!'.

sAt;rn Ill~ IUS

(Nuv. 2.1 •

l)cL·, 2 \) •• S( t'\H nrtllll1li th~
hcHI~I! f'i~r .lll)'lhill~ thllt i~ h1
Ut'Cd of l'rJ'Ilir ur nw•uli1i~ w . .

d.w . U\&gt;-it·r \~llr'"' ' r \' r&lt;'J'''' t$
will tt lf11 tl\lt til U~.· 11lllfC rlm
th.lll drml)-1\'ry' ,

C"l'i~ICllllN (1&gt;,., , 22·
j,\11 . I'J) •• ltl't' .tk :1\V,IY frnm
llHIIl~l.lll\' ,11l:li rs .md ·~·~·k lim
invn!V\' 111 ~'11 1~

tnd.l)', J,~,•l'.lli~C It

wil l tut11o11r w b"• til\'1".1}\l.'lltl~'
Ji.1r )'~1\l.

\Ill, it'll

l,\•t }IIIII' h .IIT d0\\'11 .\
b~·

f.\PIId till

~"11\1.

�•

Page B&amp;

The Daily Sentinel

Bl

T1111d,.. .. ..Mrf 22. 2112

'

Oklaho a topples Missouri
NORMAN, ()Ida. (AP) It NnU out Kelvin~
had nothing to worry about.
The Okbhoma coach .._.
concern6d

• •

Melp c:o..t(l

NCAA=~er~ ·
.

••
I ntR&lt;IW·HIM OUT -

Raptors Antonio Davis, right, Is fouled by Celtlcs Walter McCart}' (0)
as he goes to the hoop In Boston Monday. MCCart}'' was ejected from the game with a flagrant foul. (AP)
·

!

Knicks humiliated by Hornets

f
'
'

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
. . Ray Allen scored 15 first-half points and
. The Sacramen~o Kings are tough to beat Joel Przybilla had a care~r-highs ~f 12 points
· · anywhere they play. For the New York and 13 rebounds for the Bucks.
Knicks, there's no place to hide.
Detroit's Jerry Stackhouse scoresJ19 points
·
Sacramento, behind double-figilre scoring on 5-for-21 shooting.
by seven players, won its 12th
Hawks 95, Rockets 91
straight and extended its
Jason Terry scored 19 points as Atlanta
home unbeaten .streak to 16 stopped a six-game losing streak overall and
games with a 112-98 victory ·a five-game home losing skid with a victory
over the Memphis Grizzlies on · Monday over visiting J:iouston.
, night.
·
Nazr Mohammed finished with 18 points
The string of success has the Kings striving and 17 rebounds for the Hawks.
·
for more.
·
Cuttino Mobley had 26 points for the
"The win streak is' l)ice, but we are not sat- Rocltets, who have lost four of five. Steve
isfied with it. We are not ,sitting here Laker Francis had 25.
watching," Chris Webber said.
.
Maverick• 113, Nets lOS
.
The Kings improved to an NBA-best 31Dirk Nowitzki scored 39 points, including
9, which is 1 1/2 games ahead of defending nine straight during a 17~1 run in the clos;•
champion Los Angeles.
•
ing minutes, leading host Dallas past New
''
Meanwhile, New York's abysmal season Jersey.
"
.
reached new · depths as Charlotte dealt the
Jason Kidd missed his first 16 shots and ·
Kniclcs their worst home loss in the fran- . didri't make · a field goal until a 3- pointer
chise's 56-year history; 111-68.
with 25 seconds left. He had eight rebounds .
'
The Knicks' shot a season-worst 30 per- and 15 assists, including the 5,000th of his
·
cent as their losing streak reached eight c:ireer.
games, their longest skid since Dec. 5-20,
.
Jazz 101~ Wartion 99
1986:
Karl Malone made a season-high 16 free
Some players hid their heads b~neath tow- throws and scored 37 points, and Bryon Rusels as the final seconds ticked off. New York sell made five free throws in the 6nal15 seccoach Don Chaney and Mark Jackson didn't onds to lead Utah to victory at Golden State.
TheJazz shot 26 free throws in the second
hide their disappointment in the Knicks'
futility.
half and beat the Warriors for the 26th time
"I thought they threw in the towel. I in 28. meetings.
thought they gave up," Chaney said.
Antawn Jamison scored . 25 points for
· Jackson said: "It's an embarrassment:'
Golden State, which lost for the 10th time in
The Kings needed more than 24 points J 1 games.
"
and 11 rebounds from Webber and Peja StoPacers 93, Bulb 81
Reggie MiUer scored 20 points as Indiana
jakovic's 21 points to ·get past Memphis,
which shot 64 percent in the first half.
' snapped a five-game losing streak with a vicDoug Christie delivered a lift in the third tory in Chicago.
quarter, contributing eight points, three . Ron Mercer scored 18 points for the Bulls,
assists and three steals-as the Kings outscored who lost to the·Pacers for the ninth straight
Memphis 32-19 and pushed their lead to 17 time.
points.
·
Celtic• 106, Raptors 97
Memphis, without Jason Williams
Paul Pierce scored 30 points and Antoine
(migraine headache} and Shane Battier Walker added 20 points and 10 assists as
(strained groin) ,lost its fourth straight.
Boston beat Toronto.
Tony Massenburg scored 23 points and
Vince Carter scored 26 points for Thronto,
Rodney~ Buford added 18 for the Grizzlies, which had its four-game . winning . streak
who shot a season-high 56 percent. Pau snapped and its three-game road winning
Gasol scored 16 points,
streak halted.
"We knew we were short-handed, but
Kenny Anderson added 13 points and nine
that's the NBA,".Buford said, "It happens to assists for the Celtics.
all teams, which means guys have to step it
Heat 95, Cavaliers 93, Of
·
up. But we didn't:'
Brian Grant made tWo jumpers in the
In New York, the Knicks did little right final 1:22 of overtime .as visiting Miami
against the Hornets in their worst home loss won its fifth straight and dealt Cleveland its
since a 132-93 rout by Milwaukee on April 1Oth consecutive loss.
10, 1987.
Eddie Jones scored 27 points, Alonzo
Latrell Sprewell was scoreless on 0-for-9 Mourning had 15 before fouling out and
shooting, the first time he has .gone without rookie Mike James had a·season-high .12 for ·
·
a point since November 1995.
the Heat, winners of eight of 11.
·
The Knicks were held to their lowest point
Wesley Person had 19 points and·,Andre ·
total of the season. ·
Miller 17 points and 12 assists for the Cavs.
"I don't think we're treating the job as
Timberwolves 105, Wizard• 1'01
seriously as we need to," said Allan Houston,
Kevin Garnett had 23 points · and nine
who ·scored 11 points on 5-of-15 shooting. assists to offset Michael Jordan's 29 points,
· Jackson agreed, saying: "I can't tell you leading Minnesota past Wa$hington.
..
what it is but bad basketball. Top to bott9m, . ·The Timberwolves won for the 14th time
it's just bad."
in 16 games and improved to 18-2 at home.
The Hornets extended their lead to 43
Jordan had 22 points in the first half, but
poin~ in the third quarter and sent 'the shot 2-for-15 from the field in the second.
Knicks to their most lopsided loss since IndiMinnesota's Terrell Brandon, in his secana beat them 131c86 on Feb. 20,1980.
ond game back after missing the previous
l{urt Thomas led the Knicks with 16 16 with a knee injury, scored 17 points.
'
points.
.
Wally Szczerbiak added 19.
SuperSonics 109, 76era 98
Clippers 102, N,uggeta 89
Gary Payton scored 28 points and Seattle . Elton Brand had a season-high 31 points,
shot a team-record .66. 1 percent in a victory 14 rebounds arid six blocked shots as Los
'
in Philadelphia.
Angeles dealt Denver iis 14th straight road
Allen Iverson led the Sixers with 38 points loss.
·
,
and became the eighth player in Philadelphia
Quentin Richardson had 17 points and
•
history to score 10,000 career points.
. 10 rebounds for the · Clippers, while
Vin Baker added 20 points for the Sonics. Michael Olowokandi ·had 14 points, 10
Bucks 97; Plltom 79
.
rebounds and six blocks.
'
Mi~hael
Redd
scored
21
points
and
Sam
Nick Van Exel led the Nuggets with 19
.... .
Cassell added 18 as Milwaukee extended its points, 10 assists and seven rebounds.
winning streak to eight games with a win in
Detroit.

NBA

I
. ..
,

ranked
Sooners 91 ·•
would be able to rebound
'Monday night fiom a tough
loss at then-No. 4 Kansas !\TO
days earlier. They did, going
on a late first-half run and
coasting past No. 18 Missouri
84-71.
"When you have this sort of
a turnaround, you're not aS
concerned wjth practicing
you're concerned with pre,pa;.•l
ration," Sampson .said.
souri's a team that requires
lot of preparation because
have a good inside game
great perimeter players:'
.
The inside game was no.factor, and only Clarence Gilbert
was able . to find _the range ·
from outside. Gilbert had
eight 3-pointers and scored 26
poirits, but Kareem Rush had
just 13 on 4-oi-15 shooting.
"[ thought our kids did a BALL FIGHTING - • Oklahoma guard Ebl Ere (2) outbattles .
great job of guarding him, and Missouri forward Travon Bryant (5) for the ball Monc;tay. (AP)
maybe we caught him on an
off night," Sampson said.
Which the Sooners hit 10 . Thor Solverson added 15
Hollis Price scored 24 sttaight shots and scored on Mo!ldaY as Illinois-Chicago
points for the Sooners (1 5-2, their final 11 possessions beat 'f;oungstown State .85-69
4-l Big 12), who outrebound- before halftime to take a 44- in a Martin Luther King Holed Missouri 43-26 in Mon- 3t, iead. Price hit two 3-point- iday matinee.
.
day's only game involving a els: and scored 10 points durThe Flames (1 2-8, 3-3
ranked team. They also forced inl'the run, when the Sooners ·Horizon League) went ahead ·
18 turnovers in beating the fo.r~ed four turnovers and early :u:~d built a 50-25 halfTigers · (14-5, 4-2) for the converted them all into bas- time lead with a blistering
k~.·
·
73:t percent shootin~ (1 9-ofeighth straight time.
"You have to be strong and
i9ldahoma scored on its first 26) from the field: They subtough and the guys were weak th~ trips of the second half, stituted freely in the second
with the ball," Missouri coach capped by Price's 3~pointer half but managed to stay well
Quin Snyder said. "We have to thal,f"lde it 51-35. The Soon- ahead.
·
The Penguins (3·14, 1-6}; .
have some guys step up. We ers. pushed the margin to 18
need Kareem to be stronger poiq,ts a few minutes later and who shot 47 percent, were
dic:Jn't let Missouri get closer paced by Ryan Patton's 21;
and he knows that."
• Priee started slowly, but the thaJ 11 after that.
points and six assists. His back~
scoring ofQuannasWhite and
White. scored 14 points and court partner Doug Under~
Daryan Selvy kept the Soon- ha.:l"six assists for the Sooners, wood added -15 points.
·
ers going. Then three 3-point- while McGhee had 13 points
Illinois- Chicago made only
ers by Gilbert in just over four . and eight rebounds and Selvy 8-of-22 foul shots but sank
11-of-16 from 3-point ·raf)ge.
minutes gave the Tigers a 23- added 12 points.
19 lead with 6:51 left in the
1 m.-Chicago 85,
Jonathan Scheiderman had 14
half.
Youngstown St. 69
points and Cory Little added
. A follow shot by Aaron
CHICAGO (AP) -Jordan 10 for the Flames,
McGhee started a run in Kardos scored 18 points and
'

'

Lane

What's

Bridge is sound

Cowher:

Steelers ready, BI

Dead&amp;
Pamela Burson, 47

Details, A3 · ,

Wead1er
Hlp: 10, .._: SOli
Details, A2
\

lnveston still
not Impressed
NEW YORK (AP) - .A .

'

B"IDGE SAFETY -· Despite concerns over a recent reduction on legal load limits for commercial trucks traveling across the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, a·n official with the Ohio Department .of Transportation s.a id the 7 4-year-old span Is "structurally
. sound" and that minor ruston the girders ne~tr the West Virginia approach spans prompted the new limits. (Tony M. Leach)

Hkight limit prompts
motonst concerns

Health Deparbnent offers lea~ saeening

Lotteries.

Index

·

I.

.

Girls ll111e ·out

s..Jl:N•.b..ary 27 •

Middleport
health fair
Thursday
FROM STAFF REPORTS

MIDDLEPORT Do
you know the numbers of
good health?
A health fair sponsored by
the Village of Middleport,
McNelly, Patrick &amp; Associates
Insurance, Anthem and Holzer Meigs Clinic will provide
information about blood
pressure, cardiac · risk assessment, glucose, cholesterol,
height, weight, diabetes, stress,
cancer risks, ·and other infor_mation about healthy living in
Meigs Counry.
. ' The fair will be held on
Thursday from 10 a.m. until 2
p.m., is open to the public,
and will be held at the Middleport Fire Department.
Exhibits will be .included
from: James Schmoll, O.D.;
Black Lung representatives

PI••• see Fillr, A3

.

2:00 • 4:30 PM • HMC Gallipols French 500 Roam

: F~red Speakers: Koren Stocker, RD, LD; Rick ~er, ~.
Nancy B. Graham, MD; and Monique Sherrill, MD .

SPECIAL FEATURE; NQN·FASDNG CHOI.EmRQL scREENiNGS
.
FOR GIRLS AGE$ 10 • 18.
(Must be accompanied by o parent or gvardion}.
All are welcome! D~ is casual. Refreshments will be served.

'

For more
., .

r

ATHENS - Holzer Clinic
is announcing the opening of
a new and expanded health
care facility in the Athens area:.
Plans are to locate the clinic on Columbus Road and
the facility • is expected to
open late spring of 2002.
The clinic will relocate its
sleep laboratory and Dr.
Christopher T. Meyer's practice to the new location along
with adding new specialty
services.
· Dr. J. Craig Strafford, president of Holzer Clinic, said the
clinic. is considering the addition of physician coverage in
orthopedics, general surgery,
endocrinology, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and
possil:!ly urgent care services.:
"We are truly excited about
coming to Athens and look
forward to working with the
primary care physicians in the
~rea," he said.
·
'
"We will be bringing some ·
of our already existing spe~
· cialist&lt; to the area, but have
intentions to hire specialis(s
specifically for the , Athen,s
location," said Clinic Admin·~
istrator Robert E. Daniel.
The clinic is in the proce,;,;
of hiring a manager for the
Athens facility, and will soon
. after begin to hire support
staff fortits,new operation.
•
Founded more than . 50
years ago, Holzer, Clinic is a .
multi-specialty, physicianowned group, :practice with
100-plus physicians and 29
medical specialties.
Based and founded in Gallipolis, Holzer Clinic alsci has
facilities in Jackson, Pomeroy,
and Proctorville, Ohio1 as well
as Point Pleasant ·and South
Charleston, W.Va.

. .,. A specipl Milt for girls cmd ~ in our~~~-

~

' .,

trucks, 15 . tons; three-axle trucks, 19 an inspection to assess .the structure's
tons; four-axle trucks, 20 tons; and five- strength," said Coen. "After examining
axle trucks, 34 tons.
. the results, the team discovered some
Even though the load limits · are minor rust on the girders near the West
reserved for commercial trucks only, Virginia approach spans."
.
moto~ists · in both Meigs and Mason
"A reduction in t h e Iegalloa d I'1~1ts
countles have expressed concerns over was recommended only as .a pr~:~autlon' ' ' i ......
' II th' " '' ' • I'd ary measure
'
'
dr'
fi .. h
the new ltruts; ;!§'we as 'e' ,4 year-o
to ,;ns,~re .. 1ver, sa e.ty, e
bridge's stability.
added. "There·are'fii:Y froblems Wl~h the
··' "As1o~'SS m~torists don '.r exc!:~d the- ; bridg~'s ~rail sta~ilf¥:1 '·'"~~''1
.
posted wetght .hnuts, there IS absolutely · Whtle st1ll semceable and safe, the
nothing to. worry about," said John bridge, built in 1928, is considered by
Coen, bridge engineer for ODOT Dis- ODOT to be inadequate for handling
trict 10.
today's heavytlow o~traffic and is sched"Consultants from the URS Corp. uled ~o be replaced m 2003 when c~n­
recently performed a computenzed struct10n begms on a new $25 m1ll10n
load-rating analysis on the bridge during cable-stayed bridge.

sironger-than-.anticipated eco'
f
nomic rewrt Thesday tailed to .
impress investors, who instead
retreated into the now-familBY TONY M. LEAcH
iar pattern of unlo~g techTLEACHCPMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
nology stocks as they worried
noMEROY _ D ·t
t · ts'
espl e mo OilS
aboqt the timing of a~ · , ~
''coik~i:ns,.r. a~· dftkial with the Ohio
·' The Nasdaqmup;ft ~ ' "'De -~rnn~nt o(Tr~ '0~!ft1o~ (ODOT}
. ~tl) itsldM!st~'~,
sa~J rec~nt f!!dJ~tfo'n11n 'load'1iffilli 'fdi
months on eoncetnl' th:ii 'w.ill the Pomeroy~Mason Bridge is no cause
Stteetk ~ lalt n'lonlh might
for alarm:
have been too muCh, too soon
· The new limits which took effect last
The Dow .Jo.\.es industrial
Friday, reduces the legaliJlqad limit for
average closed down 58.05, or
commercial trucks crossiril:the bridge to
0.6 percent, at 9,713.80,
around. 75 percent. The limits, according
falling back fiom an earlier
to ODOT, are as follows: two-axle
advance of70.
The technology-focused
''
Nasdaq fared even worse
when its moriling gains deteriorated. It lost 47.81, or 2.5
percent, to 1,882.53 _: its
lowest cli&gt;se since Nov. 21;
BY CHARLENE Ho,EAJCH .
when the index finished at
HOEFLICHIIPMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
1,875.05.
POMEROY - "A simple
' The stand3rd &amp; Poor's 500
blood test can prevent a lifetime spoiled by irreverSible
index dropped 8.27, or 0.7
percent, to .1,1 19.31.
damJige as a result oflead poisoning, and parents need ' to
be·aware of that," said Margie
Skidmore, R.N., director of
nursing at the Meigs County
. OHIO
Health Department:
•
Pick :1:,7-3·6
To raise lead poisoning pre~ 4:7:2~ 1·,9 . .
sh.~
vention
awareness,
lucke¥9 5: 2·10..11-17"32
announced free screenings
Pick J day: ~-5
and infi&gt;rrnational sessions to
Pick 4 day: 3-9-8-5 .
be hel&lt;i at the health department on Feb. 6 and March 6
\V.VA. :
.
for children ages 6 months to
Dilly J: 0..6-Q
years.
'
6
~~ .4:9-7-2-6
. 15: 1~2-5"15-23·25
Parents, .she said, can call 1
992-6626 and make arl ··
appointment or request information.
'
· Skidmore said that of the
2 Sldlani ~ 12 Pllpl
126 ·children screened . last i'
Calendar
AS , y~ar. two had elevated blood, LEAD TESTING- Nancy Broderick, R.N., child and family health services child health clinClassifieds
82-4
lead levels. as compared to,\,) lc nurse collects a blood specimen to be tested for lead from Nevada Quails, daughter of
Comics
BS ' seven of the , 9.7 children sa,rah Q~alis, Middleport. (Charlene Hoeflich) ·
screened in 2000.
,
,
·
··
Dea'r Abby
AS
'
It
is
estimated
that
national;,'
,
"lead
pois~ming
affects
nearly
lead
poisoning occurs with- · and 36 months of age because
Editorials ·
A4
ly almOJt a million children ,, tf"ery system in the body, can out distinctive symptoms.
they have a lot of hand to
M9\'ies
A3
age
of
6
have
'
·
cause
learning
disabilities,
"Children
up
·
to
6
years
of
under
the
Obituaries
. A3
mouth activity:'
enough lead in their blood to ~ehavioral problems, ~nd at age are the inost vulnerable to
Sports
81
"Parents should have their
harm them, said Skidmore.
very htgh ,levels, . setzures, lead poisoning especially
Weather
A2
She went on io explain th~t coma and e¥en death. Often those who are between 12
,..... - .... llh•.A3 .
c 2002 Ohio V.lley Publlshlns Co.

'

'·

Holzer
Clinic·set
to open
in Athens
FROM STAFF REPORTS

I.

.

•

. _llo....._.. N8W1ptptr

c0U

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
I

446-5679
, •

I-

'

'

'
f

f

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