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•

_The_na_ny_Sen_tin_el_

II

_..;;;C;....;;;..o.........;.lle~ge Bas

Brady,-:to start for Pats in Super Bowl, B1

Page 88

Wildcats claw Gators, 70-68,,
. . ....

CHALLENGE - Aorida's Matt Bon1ner
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) - Little •
(15) battles Kentucky's Marquis
things are turning into a big problem
(50)
for a rebound In the first half,
for Nv. 5 Florida.
day In Gainesville, Aa.
The Gators lost their third straight
game, 70-68 to 1Othranked Kentucky on Tues~
day night, as mistakes cost
"I th.,ugh.t Chuck's effort was magthem a chance to snap nificent," Smith said. "Even though he's
their longest losing skid a freshman, he's mature beyond his
since 1997-98.
years.You'll be seeing a lot of him."
"There were so many times we let it
Prince broke a 63-all tie with a free
slip away," coach Billy Donovan said. throw, and his assist led to Bogans' third
· "Our biggest challenge right now is 3-pointer for a four-point lead with
minimizing those type of things."
I :28 to go.
Florida (15-4 overall, 4-3 SoutheastOn the Gators' ensuing po.session,
ern Conference) had much bigger Orien Greene hit a 3-pointer to make
problems than a 10-for-16 night from it '67-66. But Prince responded again
the foul line.
with a jumper that put the Wildcats
The worst was the Gators' rebound- back ·up by three.
ing ineptitude. Kentucky (14-5, 4-3)
Florida hal4 a chance to tie in the
had 14 more rebounds than Florida, closing sec&lt;Vtds, but Brett Nelson
including a 28-13 margin in the second missed a jumper, and the Wildcats
half.
·
grabbed the rebound.
"That, I thought, was the key to
"I give (Nelson) credit for stej:&gt;ping
pulling out the win," Kentucky coach up and trying to make the play," FloriNo. 4 Cincinnati 75,
Tubby Smith said.
da coach Billy Donovan said . "I
East Carolina 48
However, Donovan said he saw thought we had a good shot to win the
Steve
Logan
and Field Williams scored
improvement from the previous losses. game."
18 points apiece, and the nation's
"I felt like our basketball team really
Nelson led Florida with 15 points, toughest defense added. a new twist ~ a
made some strides from our. last two center U dqnis }las! em added 14 and
pesky full-court press - as No. 4
BAD SPOT- Ball State:s Billy Lynch slides into Marshall's' games," he said. "I thought our effort Greene had 13., co
Cincinnati
earned its ·20th straight win.
was very good. I thought we compet"I don't unde.stand why the losses
Ronald.Biackshear during the first half Tuesday. (AP)
Cincinnati (20-1, 8-0 Conference
ed."
keep happening," said . Haslem, who USA) extended the country's longest
In other Top 25 games, No. 4 Cincin- mi~sed two free throws with 30 seconds
nati beat East Carolina 75-48, Boston remaining. "We could have, and should winning· streak by extending its defense.
Gabriel Mikulas led visiting East CarCollege upset No. 15 Miami 70-65, and have, done so much better."
olina
(7-13, 1-7) with 12 points.
No. 25 Ohio State defeated No. 12 IlliHUNTINGTON. WVa. (AP) - Ronald Blackshear
Kentucky built an eight-point lead
nois 78-67.
scored a career- high 33 points and hit the game-winning 3early in the second half behind Prince,
Boston College 70,
Leading Kentucky was Keith Bogans, but Florida rallied to tie. Matt Bonner's
pointer to lead Marshall to a 98-95 double
No. 15 Miami 65
witq 20 points, and Tayshaun Prince, three-point pl:ly capped an 8-0 run and
overtime victory against Ball State Tuesday
Troy Bell scored 25 pointl;, including a
who had 19 points and I 0 rebounds.
mght.
knotted the score at 47 with 11:55
.
go-ahead
3-pointer with 1:47 left, and
Bogans was among three regular remammg.
· Blackshear finished shooting 11-of-27 from
Boston College .beat No. 15 Miami.
starters who played in reserve as Smith
the field, including 6-of-15 fiom behind the arch.
N elson made his first four 3-point
The Eagles scored the final nine points
shook up his team following Saturday's tries as the Gators built a 22- 15 lead
During the heated contest, both Marshall coach Greg
64-61 loss to Alabama. Forwards Erik with ·10:22 remaining in the half. It was and held the Hurricanes to one .field goal in
White and Ball State coach Tim Buckley drew technical
Daniels and Chuck Hayes got their first the second straight game Nelson was ·the ·Jast 9:49. ·
'fouls. Marshall's Tamar Slay and Ball State's Theron Smith
Boston College (15-5, 4-3 Big East) beat
starts of the season, and center Marquis used in a reserve .role since breaking an
fouled out in the first overtime.
·
the Hurricanes (18-3, 5-3) for the third
Estill replaced Jules Camara.
Marshall (10-9, 4-5 Mid-American Conference) held a
unspecified team rille.
consecutive
time and snapped their four"I really couldn't be prouder of the
76-73 lead when Ball State's Matt McColiom hit a 3-pointFlorida's misfirinl offense allowed
guys," Smith said. "I really thought they Kentucky to creep within a point going game winning streak.
er with nine seconds remaining in regulation to send the
Miami lost at home for the fint time after
hung in there and overcame some into the break. Prinll,e's buzzer-beating
game to its first overtime.
11
wins in a row. James Jones had 19 points
things, some issues to start the game." · 3-pointer cut the deficit to 31-30 and
Ball State (13-7, 6-3) built its biggest lead of the game, five
and 12 rebounds for Miami, which missed
Hayes, a freshman, responded with 10 gave him 10 points for the half.
points, during the first overtime but Marshall battled back
13 of its final 14 shots.
points and seven rebounds.
with a pair of 3-pointers by Blackshear.
During the second overtime, Marshall and Ball State were
tied at 95-95 with 32 seconds remaining. Marshall then ran
down the clock and Blackshear hit the final shot.
MarshalPs J.R. Vat)Hoose scored 18 points and had 14
rebounds. Manry Wright added 16 points while leading
·scorer Tamar Slay was held to 13. latece Williams had 11
points and 10 rebounds.
Theron Smith led the Ball State with 26 points and 17
rebounds. McCollom had 21 points and Chris Williams
added 16. Rob Robbins scored 15 points and Lonnie jones
had 12.
Ball State's second leading scorer, Patrick Jackson, suffered
a broken finger in practice last Friday and did no1 play.
Around the MAC
It ·was a memorable return to Eastern Michigan for both
Kent State coach Stan Heath and player Antonio Gates as the
Golden Flashes defeated the Hurons.
TIL fEBRUARY 2ND...
Heath's mother and father were on hand to see the firstyear Kent State head coach lead his team to an 82-62 victory'Tuesday night.
Gates, who was dismissed by Eastern Michigan two years
Super discounts on all Inventory In stock. NEW &amp; USED. Everythlna Is Discounted.
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Heath, who played at Eastern Michigan from 1983 to
1987, has picked up where Gary Waters, now at Rutgers, left
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"When you come in with a different approach (than
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After some initial struggles adjusting to the new coach, the
On.TheJob
Flashes have settled down and won 11 of their last 12 games.
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Buckeyes
· flom Page B1

J

especially on defense. r came
out and showed today that I
Was focl)sed, that I was ready."
' Only two Ohio State.players
have ever made . more free
ihrows in a game. Gary Bradds
converted 18 against Michigan
State in 1964, and Dennis
Hopson made 17 against Wisconsin in 1987.
Darby, who hit half of his six
shots from the field, also had
seven rebounds and five assists.
The loss' dropped the Illini
(15-6, 4-4 Big Ten) three
gantes behind co-leaders Indiana and Ohio State (16-3, 7-1)
in the conference. It also gave
them more losses this season

than they had all last year
when they shared the conference title with Michigan State. ·
Zach Williams added · 14
points, and Brian Brown had
13 for the Buckeyes.
The B'uckeyes made just one
field goal in the final five minutes - a big one by Darby.
Robert Archibald and Frank
Williams - each of whom
scored 16 points for the Illini
- each scored three points in
a 6-0 run that drew lllinois to
70-63.
A~ the clock hit the 2minute mark, however, Darby
hit a 15-foot jumper off the '
dribble from the left wing.
The lead never dropped
below scvcn 1again, with Darby
·hitting four free throws in the
final 39 second1. Ohio State
ftnished 29 of 42 at the line.

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POMEROY - · "If you
don't invest in education, your
economy goes to hell."
Democrat Tim Hagan is
addressing education and its
importance to t.he economic
development of Ohio and ·its
Appalachian region during a
tour of the state's river counties.
Hagan, a former Cuy.ahoga
County Commissioner and
candidate for Ohio governor,
visited Meigs Counry on
Wednesday as part of the tour.
During his Pomeroy stop,
Hagan met with key Democrats before traveling to the
Meigs County Multipurpose
Senior Center for lunch.
Hagan has received the
Ohio Democratic Parry's

Deaths
Effie Mae Smith, 93
Details, A3

Weather

:'

Dickerson named
new·OVP publisher

'

unanimous
endorsement as its
2002
guberna[Orial candidate.
His sixday "Ohio
RiverHapn
Appalachia
Tour" will
take him to nearly 20 counties
in Southern Ohio. It began in
Tuscarawas Counry and will
end in Vinton County on Saturday.
· "State government has not
been very agressive i11 addressing the needs of Ohio's
Appalachian counties, because
the' number of votes along the
river carries no clout in
Columbus," Hagan said. "The

Republicans have conrrolled
the Governor's Office for
nearly 12 years, and ami-parry
rule carl be insensitive to the
needs of people."
·Education will be the cornerstone of Hagan's campaign,
he said, and the importance of
education to economic development issues is crucial, as is a
new means of funding Ohio's
public school system.
"An educated workforce is
the greatest economic tool,"
Hagan said.
· In Monroe County, Hagan
said, he visited a school where
students had erected a sign
reading, "Trailer Park High
School," a commentary on the
inadequate modular unit&lt; used
to house students.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY
Den
Dickerson was named publisher of Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.,
effective
Wednesday, announced John
Bauer, regional vice president of Community News- .
paper Holdings Inc.
Dickerson, 48, who's had
25 years of experience in
newspapers,
succeeds
Charles W Covey, whose MAKING PLANS -- Den
resignation was effective Dickerson, right, new pu().
Dec. 7. Govey had been llsher at Ohio Valley Publishpublisher since "September ing Co., formulates plaris for
1999.
advertising With sales repreOVP publishes The Daily sentative Matt Rodgers.
Sentinel in Pomeroy, Gal- Dickerson assumed his new
lipolis Daily Tribune, Point duties with OVP on Wednes·
Pleasant (W.Va.) Register day. (OVP staff)
and the Sunday Times- Senmarketing director of a
tinel.
"What I hope to achieve group of newspapers based
as publisher is to continue in Rockingham, N.C.
A graduate of East Caroliproducing the excellent
newspapers this company na Universiry with an art
has published for a long degree, Dickerson said his
newspaper career has been
time," said Dickerson.
"I enjoy listening to our divided berween advertising
readers refer to their news- and as publisher. He began
paper as 'my newspaper,"' he working in newspapers in
added. "I urge our readers Wilson, N.C.
Since then:.he has worked
and advertisers to come to us
with their input. The only at publications at Washingway. for us to get better is to ton and Rocky Mount in .
give them what they want to North Carolina, Florence,
S.C.,ThomasviUe, Ga., and
see in a daily newspaper."
Dickerson, formerly of Palm Springs, Calif.
He has a daughter, Taylor,
Statesville, N.C., comes to
OVP after being regional
PleaseseeOVP,A3

Please IH Ha1an.. A3

GIRL SCOUTS

Hlp: SO., Low: 50s
Details, A2

Recession
coming to.an
end1
WASHINGTON (AP)
-. The U.S. economy,jolted
last fall by the terrorist
attacks, managed to eke out
small increase in the final
three months of the year in
a surprising sign that the
recession,.could .be ending. . , ·
A0.2 percent groWth me
for the gross domestic product, the country's total output of goods and services,
and other positive developments were enough to 'persuade the Federal Reserve
to call a cease-fire Wednesday in its yearlong campaign to lower interest rates.
Wall Street rallied on
MUsHING BmER - The importance of laking care of your te~th when you're yo~ng was
the Fed's more positive
stressed
by Nell Pon~er and Katherine Binns, medical students at the Ohio University College
outlook. The Dow jones
of Osteopathic Medlcme 1n a talk with Haley English, Nakayla Runyon and Sadie Fox. (Submit·
·industrial average closed
ted photo)
•
·
·
up 144.62, or 1.5 percent,
at 9, 762.86 .
The Fed's decision left
the federal .. funds rate
unchanged at 1.75 percent.

a

., Lotteries
OtUO
Pick 3: 4-2-1
Pick 4: 3-2-3-2
S!lperLotto: 7-11·13-384047
Bonus Bell: 19
Kicker: 2-5-7-8·9-Q
Pick 3 day: 5-1-4
Pick 4 day: 7-3-6-2

W.VA.
Dally 3: 6·0-2
Pall)- 4: 9-8-9- 1 ·
~werball: 7-9-15-21-40{18)

Index
2 Sections - 11 I'IIPI

Calendar
classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

·

A7
84-6
87
A6
A2
A3

Sports.

A3
81

Weather

A6

c 2002 Ohio Volley Publlshin8 Co.

LINCOLN DAY

State re resentative
to spea at dinner
BY TONY M.

.

POMEROY - State Representative Ann H . Womer
Benjamin will be the guest speaker at the Meigs Counry
Republican Parry's annual Lincoln Day Dinner on Feb. 12.
The dinner, which is the main fundraiser of the year for
the party, wtll take place at Meigs High School at 6 p.m.
Tickets are $12:
·
Womer Benjamin was first elected to the Ohio House of
Representatives, 75th District, in 1994, defeating a popular
12-year incumbent Democrat. She has
sponsored more legislation that has been
signed into law .chan any other current
House member.
She has also held key committee

.

.assignments, serving as chairman for

nutrition with an emphasis on calcium needs;
Sarah Siddiqui and Jeremy Heitmeyer, did ear,
nose, and throat evaluations Katherine Binns
and Neil Ponder stressed proper brushing and

almost four years of the influential Criminal Justice Committee.
Other committee assignments include
Finance and Appropriations, Higher
Benjamin
Education, Civil and Commercial Law.
and Education.
'
As chairman of the Criminal Justice Committee and the
Civil and Commercial Law Subcommittee, Womer Benjamin has taken the lead on several complex and difficult
issues. Last General Assembly, she shepherded Senate Bill
179, a· complex juvenile justice bill, through the House, and
drafted with Right to Life House Bill 351 , prohibiting partial birth abortions.
ln the current General Assembly, she has supervised the
revision of House Bill 274, permitting the carrying of con. cealed weapons, and due to her efforts, the bill passed out of
her s.ubcommittee - the first time a concealed carry bill
has passed a House committee.
Sixteen House bills sponsored by Womer Benjamin have
been enacted into law and she has sponsored several pieces
oflegislatiop effecting needed changes in trust and probate
law. As a supporter of efficient business and government, she
has obtained passage of initiatives updating the Uniform

Pluse see Scouts, A3

Please see Lincoln. A3

BY

CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
HOEFLICH&lt;il&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - To give Girl Scouts a
head start on good health was one of the goals
of the recent 'Just 4 Girls Health Day" held at
the Middleport Church of Christ Family Life
Center.
Everything from vision screening to vital
sign evaluations were carried out at the health
day program coordinated by Teresa Dunfee,
R.N., Ohio Univeniry College of Osteopathic Medicine, and Jerrena Ebersbach, administrator of the Big Bend Service Unit.
About 50 Meigs Counry Girl Scouts';~artic­
ipated in the various programs aimed ~f educating them about healthy lifesryles.
·
Margie Skidmore, R.N., director of nursing,
and Brenda Curfman, L.S.W, Of the Meigs
County Health Departm.ent, conducted stress
management and smoking prevention programs for the girls.
Medical students from the Ohio Universiry
College of Osteopathic Medicine assisting
were Rebecca Fredrick, who talked about

lEACH

TLEACH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Area scouts get a
head start on health

.

SMOKING DANGERS- Chassldy Wills, Amber
Hockman and Nikki Lawson get a lesson on
the dangers of smoking from Brenda .Curfman,
licensed social worker at the Meigs Gounty
Health Department. (Submitted photo)

Conilng Super Bowl
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Marshall rolls Ball State
MAC

..

Bv BRIAN J. REED

~uckeyes ori a roll, 81

Halllletown Newspeper

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Five Star S.lea Team: Alan Dural l'lell Peller John Saunders Joe Tillis
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MEDICAL CENTER

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lv

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The Daily Sentinel
..

•
''

The Daily Sentinel

I

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh!o

I'

741H92·21511• Fax: 1192-2157

'I

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'
I

''

•

'111und y,IPTTFP'J Jl, 2102
;

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Smith
CHARLESTON, W.Va.~ Effie Mae Smith, 93, Charle&lt;ton,
' died Tuesday, Jan. 29, .2002, at Sun Brjdge Putnam Nuning
Home, following an extended iUness.
Surviving are her sons, Howard C. "Dick" Smith of Blount,
W.Va., Robert E. Smith ofToledo, Carl E. Smith ofWinfield,
W.Va., L. David Smith of Chicago, Ill., and Gary W. Smith of
Charleston; daughters, Nancy M . Carpenter ofLawrenceburg,
Ind., Deborah Lynn Foster of Huntington, W.Va. , and Susan
Rebecca Mullins of Charleston; a sister, Goldie Allin of Aiken,
S.C.; and 16 grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren.
Services wiU be 11 a.m. Friday at J.E. Johnson Funeral
Home, 514 50th St. SE, Charleston, with Dr. Mervin Smith
officiating. Burial wiD follow at O 'Dell Cemetery in Quick,
W.Va. Friends inay call at the funeral home tiom 6-8 tonight.

Lltttrr to"'" •dUrN an wdcOMt. Tlt'J rhO.W H "'' 11M'11 JOO """-AU Nllm

wt rubjn:t lo Mkil~K ,llllll "'"'' bt ripftfatul U.ciMIN lJIIIIrcr• Gild ltltplwllt 11wnhr.

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:. The six students of Pomeroy's SEM School set aside books,
; paper and pens on Tuesday to enjoy tiM! unseasonable weath; 1'r and ta help keep their corner of the world a little neater. The
! •tudents swept and cleaned the sidewalk and curbside on
: 11echanlc Street, where their school Is located. They also
•femoved weeds and picked up litter from the area. (Brian J.
j'leed)

NATIONAL, VIEW

Unfair
Drug law has unitended
consequences for college students
• The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, on drug conviction.~ andJeqeral aid:This academic year, nearly 44,000
college students will be denied federal financial aid
because of a drug conviction in their background.
M any .will properly bear the financial penalty for having violated drug l4ws. But for others, the hit will be
far more punitive than lawmakers envisioned.
Pe.ople who commit drug offenses before going on
to higher education were not intended to be targeted. The law, passed in 1998, was designed to get uni¥ersity students who broke drug laws while receiving
federal aid.
The law seemingly could be amended to clarify its
intent, but it hasn't been. Despite the efforts of its ·
author, Indiana Republican Rep. Mark Souder, to
force the Department of Education to bring its
enforcement efforts into line with its intent, the measure continues to act like a buzz saw, cutting down
the opportunities of thousands of students.
This has led to two unintended consequences:
Thousands of students simply lie about drug possession an d trafficking convictions, or simply leave the
question blank. Those who are honest about their
indiscretions are penalized.
The Department of Education should enforce the
law as Congress intended. Or Congress must revisit a
well-intended law that inadvertently and unfairly has
stymied the education of thousands of American stu·
dents.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED

'

~AESS

.

Today is Thursday,) an. 31, the 31st day of2002.There are 334
days left in the year.
Torlay's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 31, 1950, President Truman announced he had
ordered development of the hydrogen bomb.
On this date:
In 1606, Guy Fawkes, convicted for his part in the "Gunpowder Plot" against the English Parliament and King James I,
was executed.
In 1797, composer Franz Schubert was born in Vienna, Austria.
In 1865, Robert E.Lee was named general-in-chief of all the
Confederate armies.
. In 1917·, Germany served notice it was beginning a policy of
unrestrict.ed submarine warfare.
· In 1934, President Franklin Roosevelt devalued the doll~r in
relatio n to gold.
In 1944, during World War II, U.S. forces began invading
Kwajalein Atoll and other parts of .the Japanese- held Marshall
Islands.
In 1958, the United States entered the Space Age with its
first successful launch of a satellite into orbit, Explorer 1.
In 197 1, astron auts Alan B. Shepard Jr., Edgar D. Mitchell and
Stuarr A. R oosa blasted otf aboard Apollo 14 on a mission to
the moon .
In 1990, McDonald's Corp. opened its fir st fast-food restaurant in Moscow.
In 21)(10, an Alaska Airli nes jet plummeted into the Pacific
Ocean, killing all 88 people aboard .
.
Ten yea r, ago: Leaders of th e U.N. Security Council's member st.1tt'' held an unprecedented su mmit, after which th ey
issued a declaration on collective security, arms control and
nuclear non-proliferation.
Five years ag": Three days of deliberations in the OJ. Simpson civil trial in Santa Monica, Calif., were scrapped and the
jury ordered to start again after th e only black woman on the
panel was replaced because of misconduct.
O ne year ago: A Scottish court sitting in the Netherlands
convi cted one Libyan and acquitted a second in th e 1988
bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. The
sta te o f Georgia hoisted its new flag above its statehouse, one
fea turing a 1maller Confe(ierate battle emblem. Michel
Navrati l, one of the last known survivors of the sinking of the
Titanic, died in Montpellier, france, at age 92 .
Today\ Birthdays: Actor John Agar is 8L Author Norman
Mailt ,. " 79. Actress Jean Siq1mons is 73. Baseball Hall..pf. F.unt r Ln11c lla11ks is 7l. Composer Philip Glass is 65. Actre~•
Suzanne Ples hctte is 65. Actor Stuart Margolin is 62. House
Minority Leader Richard A, ·Gephardt, D-Mo., is 61. Blues
si nger- musician Charlie Musselwhite is 58. Actress Jessica Walter is 58. Baseball Hall- of-Farner Nolan Ryan is 55. Singer Phil
Collins is 51 .

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LOCAL BRIEFS
EMSIOcalls

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

No lln.rif•H h ttt rr will H l'ubiUIIU. Lltttn tlto11lil N ilt

.

;: community.Project

Den Dlckereon
Publleher

,.

r

~ The Dally !llillnel• Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Security .concems may
effed nudear program

Blame Congress, not Bu~h,Jor fiasco that led to Enron.
Congress certainly ought to find out
whether the Bush administration can be
tied to the Enron scandal, but it also needs
to undo i~ own culpability in the affair.
Specifically, Congress should ensure
that investors and the public arc protected by clean audits of companies. But two
years ago, dozens of congressmen helped
accounting firms llodge proposed regulations that would have kept them honest
and might have forestalled Enron's collapse.
That's the gist of one of the better
investigative stories published about the
Enron scandal, which appeared · in the
business section of USA Today on Jan. 17.
It recounted how a proposal by former
Securities and Exchange Commission
Chairman Arthur Levitt was torpedoed
by the accounting industry in 2000
through Congressional pressure.
Levitt, who will go down in history as
one of the most aggressive SEC chairmen
on behalf of investors ever (he's also a formJ!r owner of Roll Call and a friend),
wanted accounting firms to choose
between doing audits for companies and
·
consulting.
On the basis of past cases involving
Arthur Andersen, which may now go
under amid the Enron affair, Levin was
convinced that audits were being compromised because the firms were protect·
ing their consulting businesses.
This seems to be just what happened iq
the Enron case. Andersen, which did
about $90 million in business with Enron
last year, turned a blind eye - or worse
- as the ·energy giant misrepresented its
financial condition· by hiding.huge quantities of debt.
As USA Today's Gregg Farrell reported,
Levitt's effort to end conflicts of interest
by the accountants was resisted by 38
House members and 14 senators, most of
them members of committees overseeing
the SEC.
And the congressmen fnvolved were

Morton
Kondracke
COWMNIST

accounting firms were "cooking the
books" or "looking the other way."
As USA Today reported, Gramm and
other senators were shown such evidence
- which involved Arthur Andersen's
audits of the Waste Management Corp.
- but Gramm did not change his attitude. He'd received more than $200,000
fiom accounting firms over five years.
The current chairman of the SEC,
Harvey Pitt, a former law)rer for accounting firms, has proposed a private-sector
overseer. Congress needs to make sure
that oversight is tough enough to keep
the industry honest.
So far, the Enron scandal has not caused
an earthquake in the general economy,
but it could if other major companies go
under, and it turns out that their audits
were as unsound as Enron 's.
Besides ensuring clean audits, Congress
needs to enact legislation - previously
defeated - to protect employees from
having their retirement plans overly
invested in company stock.
It needs to consider repealing legislation passed in 2000. reducing regulation
of derivatives, the financial instruments
Enron used to construct its shaky empire.
And it needs to pass tax-law changes
ensuiing that, when they are profitable,
high-flying companies like Enron can't
utterly escape taxes. ·
Of course, Congress should demand
that the administration reveal the process
that led Vice Presidem Cheney's Energy
Task Force to adopt an energy polity
containing at least 17 proposals on
Enron 's wish list.
But, at the moment of Enron's collapse,
the evidence so far indicates ·that the
Bush administration did nothfng to
cue it. Meantime, what Congress did arid
didn't do allowed the crisis to develop.l't's
up ·to Congress to clean up the mess and
prevent future ones. ·
·

rcc1p1ents of large campaign donations
from the accounting industry. They
include Rep. Billy Tauzin, R-La., who's
now . in the forefront of investigating
Enron, and Sens. Charles Schumer, DN.Y., and Phil Gramm, R-Texas.
In July 2000, Tauzin, chairman of the
House Energy and Commerce Committee and recipient of$143,424 in accounting industry campaign money from 1995
to 2000, wrote a letter to the SEC that
was co-signed by 20 other House members. The letter said that there was "no
evidence" of a problem justifying the
SEC's proposed action.
Tauzin's office now acknowledges that
the chairman has taken a fresh view of
the matter since Enron's collapse and
·
Andersen's disgrace.
Schumer, who received donations
worth $329,600 fiom accounting firms
over five years, sent a letter in May 2000
that former SEC officials said was almost
certainly composed with the assistance of
the accounting lobby. Since the Enron
scanr;lal broke, Schumer has turned over
$68,800 in Enron and Andersen contri·
butions to a fund for Enron employees
whose savings were wiped out in the collapse.
And Gramm, then-chairman of the
Senate Banking Committee, wrote the
SEC in September 2000 questioning
(Morton Kondnu:ke is executive editor 'of
whether any evidence existed that Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

res-

. DAYTON, (AP) -The fed. er.U government wantli to move
_'plutonium-filled ~ space batteries
. 'tiom the former Mound
, nuclear weapons plant to a more.
·.secure location, lawniakers and .
local officials said Wednesday. ·
However, the officials, who
: want to protect jobs, say it
would cost less to upgrade
: security at the current site.
The Heat Source/R.adioiso., topic Thermoelectric Gener:ttor
program in suburban Miamis-

Scouts

;~

from Page AI
' flossing for good dental
health; and !fdam Peterick
· ·a nd Shannon McAfee talked
about exercise as a way to
· better health.
· Vision screening ·was pro,\rided' by Peter Turkson and

You think that this Bush administra·
cion was cozy with Enron? During the
1990s, when Enron was putting togetHer the overseas deals that contributed to
its collapse, the corporation had no better friend than Bill Clinton.
Clinton and j!nron CEO Kenneth
Lay first met ifr August 1993 in Vail,
Colo., when Mack McLarty, Clinton's
chief of staff, invited Lay to play golf
with the president. McLarty had worked
in the Texas energy industry, and he
knew Lay well.
,At that time, Enron had already begun
efforts to build a $2.8 billion power
plant in the state of Maharashtra in
India, which would be the company's
largest overseas project. Outing the next
18 months, Enron se.cured a $400 million loan from the 'U.S. governmentsubsidized Export-Import Bank, and
when final negotiatio~s with the state .of
Maharashtra stalle~ m January 1995,
Commerce Secretary Ron Brown went
to India with Lay to secure the contract.
Clinton's energy secretary, Hazel
.
O'Leary, directly&lt; contacted Prime Mmister P.V: N arasimha Rao . on Enron's
behalf, according to a 1995 .report in the
New York Times.
Soon afterward, India awarded Enron
the concr~ without soliciting other
bids. The uproar from Maharashtra citizens was so great that they ousted the
party that had approved the deal and
voted in the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya
Janata Party, whic h had run on an anti"
Enron platform . The BJP had promised

Enron gave $100,000 to the Democratic Party.
·
This was the same week that an
Enron executive accompanied thenCommerce Secretary .Mickey KantOr
on a trade mission to Bosnia and Croa- '
tia. With Kantor's help in Croatia, Enron
signed a memorandum of understani!ing to construct a $100 million pov.cer
plant.
,
COLUMNIST
(McLarty later became a paid advis,er
to Enron, following in the footsteps of
several officials who had served in the
to investigate the alleged kickbacks to elder Bush's administration.)
;
government officials, the environmental
A Clinton administration official told
impact of th e power plant and the arti- the Times, "It was a bit more nuanced
ficially ,high prices th e party said Eqron than that."
would charge for electricity.
During Clinton's first term in offi~e,
. True to its word, BJP immediately Enron and other companies•given. coystopped co nstruction of the plant, eted seats on the Clinton adrninistr)lputting Enron's enormous investment in tion's overseas trade missions collectiV~:­
jeopardy.
ly contributed SIS million to Derriocr,tOn Nov. 22, 1995 , according 10 White tic Party committees. Clearly, the Bu1h ·
House documents reviewed by Time administration was breaking no n~
. cl·
d
FYI
ground in its back-scratching relationnote h'
.h
·
h
k 1 '
magaztne, mton scraw1e an
M L
.
. . s tp wtt corporatlohs t at rna e . ar~e
1
to c arty, enc osmg a newspaper aru·
all
. · ·d
E
,
bl
, h h 1 di po1mea1 . onatlons. 1rtu y every· pres- ."
1
c eon nron s pro ems wtt t e n a ident and member· of Congress, regarapr~Ject.
, less of party affiliation, comes into office
McLarty then reached out to Enron s with long lists df IOUs. It's the way the
chatrman, Ken Lay, and over the next system works.
·
nme ~onths closely momtored the proSo, I offer again these · three lit(le .
JCCt With th e U.S. ambassador to New words: camp~ign-fimlnce reform.
Delhi, keeping Lay informed of the
•
administration's efforts," Time wrote.
Ooan Ryan is a colum"ist for the S~n .
BJP soon dropped its objectio ns to Francisco Chronicle. Send comments to ~er
the power plant. In June 1996, four days in care of this newspaper or send her e-mpil
before India granted final · approval, at joauryans.fgate.com.) .~

JOan

R yail.

. . - .. ..

,,

. Joddie Neff, while ~ Stephanie
Seig stressed the importance
of proper handwashing for
destroying germs.
Avery Wright and Elizabeth Zmuda demonstrated
breast self-exams using a
model, Timotlty Kermode
took vital signs for the scout,
and Kelly Salinas .discussed
height and weight measurements.
owners.

Hagan
flom

LOCAL STOCKS
Federal Mogul- 1.0t
use -20.35
·
Gannett- 66.76 ·
Akzo- 43.37
AmTech/SBC- 38.30 General Eloc1rlc _; 38.88
·Ashland Inc. - 45.99
GKNLY-3.67
AT&amp;T-17.45
Harley Davidson- 55.30
Bank One - 38.66
Kmart-'- t.39
· BLI- 10.52
Kroger - 20.76
Bob Evans- 28.25
Landa End - 49.45
~ BorgWarnor- 55.02
Ltd. -t6.20
NSC -22.30
Champion - 2.95
Charming Shops- 6.05 Qak Hill Flnar1dal-17.07
City Holding- 13.88
OVB-23.81
BBT-34.83
Col-21 .29
Peoples -19.05
OG -t5.91
Papaleo- 46.87
' OuPont - 43.tt
AEP-41 .22

Arch Coal - 19.33

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A Certificate of Accomplishment was awarded to the
Meigs County Agricultural Society for its outstanding 2001
Meigs County Fair. Fair B0ard members Wesley Karr and
Dave Burt accepted the award, presented by Ohio Agri·
culture Director Fred L. Dailey. The presentation was
made during the annual meeting o1. Rice and Ohio'·s 94
agricultural societies at' the Ohio Fair Managers Associa- ·
tlon convention. (Submitted photo)

Lincoln·
from PapAl
Commercial · Code with
respect to investment securities and modernizipg corporation law regarding for profit
and non-profit corporations.
Womer Benjamin, a delegate for George W. Bush in
the 2000 Republican National Convention, has also
authored legislation and
worked to improve:
• campaign finance expanding reporting for judicial candidates of the Ohio
Supreme Court;
• elections changing
antiquated and redundant

•

OVP

from Page AI
who resides in Rockingham .
He is a lifelong Presbyterian
and a longtime member of
Rotary.
Dickerson said his emphasis
as publisher is on the customer.
''I'm very much a marketer
and I'm always looking for
ways to improve the product,"

-TRIVIA

(USPS 213-HO)
Ohio VIlli\' ""blllhlng Co.

was valedictorian of his highschool class.

at (740) 992-215!1.

New• Department•

The meln IIIJmber Ia 992·2156.
Oepanment axtan11ona are:

Qenenll manager

· Ext. 12

Ext. 13
Ext. 14

or

Other Hrvlcn
Ext. 3
Clrcullltlon

Ext. 4

Claoellled Ado

Exl. 5

•,

ToHnd•mall
nawoOinydallyMntlntl.oom

On the Web
www.myclallysenllnel.coro

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Published every afternoon, Monday

lllrough Frldey, 111

Pomeroy,

Ohio.

Court St.,

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postage paid at Pomeroy.

lllmlllr: The AIIOCiotld Preaa·and
lht onto Newspepor Aaloclatton.

- - : Senti odd- comiC·
llonl to The Dally Sentlnot, 1t1 Court.
St., Pomeroy, 01110 4878~.
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Thl Dally Sentinel. ~II will bO glvon

w-

canter each
No eublolfplton b)l
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13WOoka

Variance
granted

OESto meet

Chris Isaak (71re Chris Isaak
Show), voted one of People
magazine's 50 Most BeaUiiful,

Correction Polley
Our main concern In all.stories Is
to be accurate. If yctu know of an
error In a stooy, can tho newsroom

I.

Premier - 8.50
Roc'iiwall _; 19.01
Rocky Boots - 5.83
RO Shell- 49.03
Saars-51 .90
Shonay's - .34
Wai·Mart - 59.75
Wancly'a - 31.35
Worthington - 14.65
Dally sloek reporta are
the 4 p.m. · closing
quotaa of 1he previous
day's trilnsae~ona, provided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of Gal·
llpolis.

POMEROY - Uniu of
POMEROY -A civil suit
the M~igs Emergency Service has been filed in MeigS
~nswered nine calls for assis·
County Common Pleas
tance on Wednesday. Units Court by Robert Tripp, Tupresponded as follows:
pers Plains, ~gains! Herbert L.
CENTRAL DISPATCH Orate, Reedsville, and others,
7:03a.m., State Route 338, demanding settlement of a
Pearl Russell, O'Bieness boundary lfispute, an order
Memorial Hospital;
enjoining trespa.1s, an order to
9:57 a.m., Overbrook remove buildings and properNursing Center, William ty, and an order to construct af
Casto, Pleasant Valley Hospi- ence.
tal;
.
.
The suit also demand• dam12:08 p.m., Naylors Run, ages in the amount of
Annette Marshal, Holzer $25,000, and punitive damMedical Center;
ages and attorney fees.
12:57 p.m. ; Mill Stree~,Jeff
Davis, PVH;
2:35 p.m., South Second,
Ruth Johnson, PVH;
·
3:29 p.m., Lincoln Street,
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Elizabeth Milton, HMC;
6:29 . p.m., HMC Clinic, Village Cou ncil granted
Charles Ritchie a flood variJudith Bing, HMC.
ance by a vote of 3-2 during
RUTLAND
an
emergency meeting held
12:29 p.m., Hill Top Road,
last night at the Mumcipal
Debra McCoy, HMC;
2:40 p.m., Halliday Road, Building.
~ouncilmen
La rry
Bobby White, HMC.
Wehrung, George Wright and
Victor Young III voted in
favor of the variance and
Councilmen Bryan Shank
and Todd Norton · voted
POMEROY- A report of against it. Councilman Jackie
counterfeit money is being Welker abstained from the
investigated by the Meigs vote.
County ~heriff's Department.
According to reports, represetatives for Racine Home
National Bank reported they
RACINE A regular
had discovered a counterfeit meeting of the Racine Chap$20 bill that was passed at a ter 134, Order of Eastern Star,
Southern Junior High girls will be held on Monday at
basketball game.
7:30 p.m. Initiation practice
Secret Service agents from will be held .
Columbus have been contacted.
In other matters, Jocinda
Ferguson of Middleport
RUTLAND - Zion Road
reported her trailer on Leadwill be dosed beginning on
ing Creek Road had been
. Monday until further notice
broken into, however, nothing
so that stream bank work can
.was reported missing.
be completed.
Robert
Marcinko
of
Reedsville informed deputies
someone had spray painted
his license plate while his car
POMEROY - Friends of
was parked at his ·home on
the Library will meet on
·
Joppa Road.
Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.

Fake money
probed

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

v·

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burg produces plutonium-filled
heaters and electrical generators
for NASA's deep-space probes.
The U.S. Department ofEnerg{ started tethinking security at
the program because of national
security alerts after the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks, the local officials
said. They said DOE officials
notified them of their intent to
move tl1e program.
"It is their intention to ·
move the assembled RTGs off
the Mound site for security
reasons," said Michael Gessel.

"People in Michigan are no
smarter than we are;' Hagan
said. "If elected Governor, I
Page AI
will call a special session of
, "The condition of some of the General Assembly, and call
; Ohio's school facilities is an · in leaders of educational
unbelievable statement about groups and other organiza·
the state's priorities," Hagan tions to work toward a solusaid.
tion.
, Hagan criticized the Ohio
"School funding must
Legislature and Gov. Bob Taft move away from a property
• (or neglecting the school tax system, but the public has
funding issue, and said a fund- a right to help determine
· i.ng plan in Michigan is proof how schools should be fundthat a compromise can be ed.
, reached which would allow
"If we can't make a case
the relief of the school fund - against falling behind other
'i ng burden. from property states. we can't win this race."

RYAN'S VIEW

Fallen energy giant had
no
better
.friend
than
Clinton,
.
.

Fair ·Recognized

File suit

election laws;
• working ' conditions for
nurses - eliminating mandatory overtune;
• reporting of graduation
rates in the state's public
school report cards - by
requiring cprrect data in calculations;
• Ohio's Victims· of Crime
Fund - protecting it from
the claims of felons;
• Ohio's rape laws expanding the ·definition of
what is considered rape;
• Ohio's DNA cjatabase by including certain "gateway" felonies.
for information on the
•
dinner/program or to purchase tickets, contact Brenda
Roush at 992-7357.

he said. "My focus is on our
customers and advertisers, and
how we can better serve
them. ·
"We exist for them; · Dickerson added. " If we didn't
have an adequate number of.
people making ' the comcious
decision to buy our newspaper or advertise in them, we'd
be out of business."

· Road closes

Friends meet

Plan benefit

TUPPERS PLAIN§..~ ­
Dwight Icenhower, local Elvis
tribute artist, will hold a benefit concert on Feb. 9 from 7
to 9 p.m. at Eastern High
School. Proceeds will benefit
the family of Pam Richards,
who died recently, and will be
used to help pay funeral
expenses. Tickets are $7 for
adults, S5 for those six to 12,
and free for those five and
under.

Clarifation
POMEROY - A ' lawsuit
filed by Douglas Bobb of
Pomeroy against Sheriff
Ralph Trussell does not allege
damage to an impounded
vehicle by the wrecker ser~
vice, Searles Towing. The suit
alleges "unknown damage to
the vehicle due to the
improper towing and illegal
removal from the plaintiff's
real estate and other ·humilia. tion and other such intangible
damages."

Scholarship
available
CHESHIRE - . Scholarship assistance for students in
the Applachian area who haw
been ac~ epted by a two or
four-year college but lack the
required resources to attend is
avaiable.
Applications are .w:tilabk at
their local high sc hools or at
the Cheshire office of the
Community
Gallia-Meigs
Action Agency, or online at
w\vw.coadinc.org .
The scholarship program is
sponsored as a collaboration
among the Ohio Appalachian
Center for Higher Education,
COAD and the Calha-M eigs
CAA. Awards will be the
decision of the Scholarshi p
·Selection Committee :md will
be announced by May 1.
Additional information is
available by calling the Galli aMeigs CAA at . 992-6629 or
367-7341 .

The VIUage of Middleport would like to ••press thal)ks to the
providers and workers for our recent Health Fair. We would ·.:
also like to thank all or the village residents who clime and . • ·
plirtldpaled In the acUvltles.
·
Providers Included:
The Middleport Fire Department
Don SUvers, John Newsome, &amp; Joe Anthony
Orville Hill and Jim Morrison
Anthem IICIBS
,
Ul!lverslty of Rio Grande and Crossroads Program
Dept. of Jobs and Family Services
Meigs County Senior CltizeiiS
Meigs Council on Aging
Overbrook Center
· Meigs public Library
Dr. James Schmoll
The Arthritis Foundation
Rock Springs Rehabilitation Center
Woodland Centers
·
'
Wel&amp;ht Watchers
Veteran's Memorial Skilled Nursing Center
Holzer Clinic Black Lung Program
Holzer Medical Center Rebabllltalion Program
Appalachian Dental Clinic
OSU ExteiiSion Office
Meigs County Health Department
Holzcr.CIInlc
Holzer Medical Center
McNelly Patrick IIUUraoce Agency
Wileman huuraace Agency
· Middleport Church of Christ
Vauahan's Market

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Pomeeoy, MldiiiiiPDrt, Ohio
' •.

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STOP IN AND su OUR
sn tCTJON or Bovos br.ARs
AND omr.a Ptusn ·
Ca I fCTI91 rs

One lucky person
will win this sweetheart basket
.
.

Thursday, February 14, 2002!
(Retail val~ approx. $700.00)
•

·~

1) Must be at least 18 yn pi I!J!.:.- · 2) Must regilter at'Oile of dieii.pardclpatlna businesses•
3) Name, phone number and ~~~~~~~t·ofbusiness must appear ln.each entry form.
4) No purchase necasary. ·
S) Employees of tbJs newspapet &amp; their immediate families are not ·eHgible.
6) Contest good Feb. 1.· Feb. 12, lOOl
7) Winner will be randomly drawn Thursday, February 14th.
8) Winner will be contacted to ~hedule promotional photo at business locatioh.

..,;

.i! ~~

'.,. .

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~,ltl'

...

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....

Thuradey, JM. 31 , 2002

A Cut Above
Beauty&amp; Tannl119

Tannif18 &amp;pecial

Pomeroy, Ohio

·········~············•
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Feb. 1at thru Feb. 14th

•

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Haircut &amp; style for $18.00
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parairln wax or manicure.

949-2817

3rd Street

Aaclne, Ohio

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Stop Ill: 716 Nortb 2nd Ave.
!&gt;if.W
Call: ,;U491
Online Store:

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The

·Middleport ·
Flower Shop

Ctm.eny ..

14!1 N. 2nd Av•. Mlddltport, OH 48710

•Jwtet tfainesfor your S'Wtd/ieart•

....Valentine Specials..
Roses and VaSes, fresh
cuts, gift ~kets, bears
&amp; lots more

253 N. Second Ave. Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-4055
Susan Baker
sue@ohlorlverbears.com

Want something different?

Jewelry as ·
individual as you.

HOUSE
• Bears • Candles
• Baskets • Purses
• Vases • Boyd's Bear figurines
all for Valentine's Day!
Pomeroy, Ohio

• leul's • Carhartt
•nurse Scrubs • Belts
• Boots
D
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290 N. 2nd

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&amp;~

e.•.t,

I

. I

=====

• Bedroom Suites
· • Living Room Suites
·
• Curio's • Entertainment Desk
Much, Much more ,

Sue~
\\

Selectables

99 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio
(740) 992-Q298
10:00 am to 5:30pm

.

Monday through Saturday

Houra- 10 am - 6 pm • Mon-Tue-Wed·Frl.
10 am· 2 pm Sat· Cloaed Thuraday
36474 Peach Fork Rd.
Pomeroy

"Home of the 89¢ bag of ice"
Hartinger Parkway
E. Main St.
Middleport
Pomeroy

Antiques 8/. Collectibles
~make great Valentine Gifts- :6il

740-992-9513

•••••••••••••••••••••
Nails by
•••

Weaving Stitches
.· . Gift Shop

Pam&amp;Mandy

.

• New lines arriving daUy . .
. • Lots of Americana Home Decor
• Matcbln11 rup, shades, place mats, shower curtalllli,
valances (variety of styles available)
• New candle line
•Angels
• Hand cal'\led rabbits

.

..

special HouN

•

. •
forFeb.l4
•
6 a.m.· 7 p.m. •

Pomeroy, Ohio

· rtfiursday,
/'february I ~tfi'

Circa

1930

1oM_.""' 4r.aiJ M J'-a

a. MI.M ...... a&amp;nl-.. ~rMJ, 8prokll4

·ICE CREAM CAKE

www.courtatreetgrlll.com

992-3322
.

Meigs ·
Massage Therapy .

.

..-

.

992•9947 · .

-=~
- =~-- ~- -

·-

.. - ·-

Get something for your
"Special Someone" at

• Flags • Candles

• New line of spring clothing
· arriving dally
• Free gift wrap

• free parking
• Free layaway
on the "T'' In Middleport

74Cl-992-3148

•

liii:JEie Accepted

f1

Check out our
candle holder with
of scented candle. , .,,,_

636 Brick Street

·~·· .

1/4 Caret
Diamond
Heart Pendant

$

Rutland, Ohio

742-2512

"'
~
~~

SUPER BOWL SALE

~. r~

.

.
·

.

.

213 N. 2nd .

992·1705 .

r

'lballa.tbor

0

J

Middleport, QH

I

· 1

Extra Large Pizza with 1 topping and free order of
Cinnamon Sticks $8.00
·
Promotion starts Wednesday Jan. 30 thru Super Bowl
Sunday Feb. 3~
·

FOX'S PIZZA DEN

•

~ 11oenpiiC,

, ... , ... ..,. 81111o Medlcillloolrd

RUTLAND, OHIO

\

•q'

· 195 N. Second Middleport, Ohio

·'·

992·1622

Hours: Mon·The-Wed 9 am· S pm
Thur &amp; Sat 9 am • l pru
J
137 C Norib S«ond
Middleport, Ohio'

992-6376

'' n

"

/t. ,.

~-~

.•l~

Office Service 8l Supply·-

$8.50- 21' cut
.•

-,

Looklna for asPecial Ualentine Gift?
. Look no further! ·

Big Daddy Pizza with 1Topping
.

-u

Middleport Department Store

· ·· Houns- Tues-Sat 9 am • 7 pm ·
•
271 1/2 N. Second
Middleport, Ohio
•
•
•
'
.
. . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . .

1

112 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
. 740-992-6524

CC11ltodoy

•••
••
••
••
•

-

· ~!f. -Candle Creations

Valentine's 'Day

Order your
sweetheart on

992·3684 .

Hew Textured Pillars
Cake,Cut Outs
Frosted Pillars ' • ·
DesiQner froQronces available

-

·~

39l39·Bradbury Rd., Middleport,
6am-8pm

a.fice,.t/M

992·2955

~~========~=========== ~=======
- ~
A~~IQUE;q1
McClure's Family Restaurants .

'

Dairlj
Queen

112 E. Main Pomeroy, Ohio

Tues-Frl: 10- 6 &amp; Sat.: 10-6 :
www.thecountrycandleshop.com_

I

~~

:

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

740-992-455~ ~

Hours:
Silt 10..5 • Sun 1-6

...

Middleport

Perfect for Your ·
Valentine.

P6Js 'Waoim Crafts atuf~ (jijts

220 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, OH
(740) 992·9115

992-1702

Perfect Gifts for Your
Valentine

992-2284

out our selection
of Russell Sto"er
Candies and Va
Cards

Candles &amp; Candle Making Supplies

I

• · *J•ui &amp;.~~

:

I

The countrv candle Shop

I

';JI.,,.e ~ ?,fea/4.

102 E. Main SL

992-7696

•.

¥ . ~ S~eeta/4.

By Hearth and
Candlelight

.

·.

1oo E. Moln St.

Middleport

~ 4, ~e4t4«!Utlet
¥ .

992·3633

0/iJo'!l(jr~tr !Btars, cotkaiik 6ttm
&amp; lolls, &amp; mueli 1fiiJTt!

HARTWELL

992·5627

•

'

Rive; Bear~:~

10

218 N. Second

•

Pomeroy

· 110 W. Main

Rt•.124 Minersville, OH

.

•

••••••••••••••••••••••
Antiques &amp;
Collectibles

n. Shoe Place

I

••
•:

Fabric Shop

:

NIKE • REEBOK· ASICS ·
EASTLAND· DEXTER· KEDS
HUSK PUPPIES. DOCKERS

..

.. .''

:

7 ·:

Sign-up now for our Quilting Classes

•:

The Dally Sentinel encourages you to
shop at these participating
merchants for Valentine,s Day!

tanDing session, faclal,

SJ5099 :

: · Ualentine a new
: Sewing machine

'

••

�.,
•

.

Ohio

'The Daily Sentinel
••

~ ~~~~--------------Ohio weather

COLUMBUS (AP) -- Soil samples
taken neiu a closed uranium enrichment
plant in southern Ohio turned up low
lewis of hazardous materials, results that
some worry could threaten a major economic development plan for the area.
The Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency asked its federal counterpart to
test the soil for toxins before the U.S.
Department of Energy turns over the
Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant site
in Piketon to ·a nonprofit organization.
The federal goYernment must have the
state's agreement that the property is
uncontaminated before it can ·be transferred to the Southern Ohio Diversifica.
tion Initiative, a nonprofit group t)lat
wants to convert 340 acres of the 3, 700-

- .,
•

1-1··-1·

@·

&lt;&gt;~-- ~Showeta T-110m11 . Rain

.... . ..
Flurrila

~

Snow

loa

J

More like winter again Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

An approaching low pressure system will bring more rain to
fhe area tonight. The National Weather Service said there also
was a possiblity of thunderstorms.
· Lows will be in the mid-50s.
A cold front trailing southwest from the low will move across
the region Friday, dropping temperatures. Readings will fall to
around 40 by mid-day.
.
Any leftcver rain could mix with or change to snow showers.
Near normaltemperatutes are then expected for the first half
of the weekend.
.
Sunset tonight will be at 5:49, and sunrise on Friday is at
7:40 a.ni.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy through the evening, then showers
likely after midnight. Breezy and mild. Lows 57 to 62. Southwest wind around 15 mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
· Friday... Windy and turl)ing colder. Showers in the morning
and a chance of showers late. Mostly cloudy. Early morning
highs in the upper 50s, then temperatures falling into the·lower
; 40s.West wind 20 to 25 mph and gusty. Chance of rain 80 percent.
Friday night. ..A chance of rain. showers early, otherwise part; ly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 30s.
Saturday night.'.. Partly cloudy. Lows near 20.
. ' Sunday... Mostly cloudy. A chance of snow showers during
; the night. Highs in the upper 30s.
: Monday... Mostly cloudy. Lows in the lower 20s and highs in
1
; the upper 30s.
; Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s and highs in
; the lower 40s.
·
: Wednesday... Partly cloudy. Lows 22 to 27 and, highs in the
:.)ower 40s.

,.:. CSX backs
'regional airport
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - A top executive of
CSX Transportation Inc.
announced Wednesday that
the railroad company supports ·
construction of a new regional airport between Charleston
and Huntington.
"I am a former resident of
WestVirginia and I want to' see
this state move forward ... and
prosper;' s.aid AL Crown, executive vice president for transportation for CSX, based ·in
Jacksonville, Fla.
Crown said CSX Corp., the
railroad's parent company, is·
the state's second-largest private employer when its · 3,500
railroad employees and• 1,600
employees ofThe Greenbrier
resort are included.
According to Crown, the
company averages 2, 700
flig~ annually in or out of
Tri-State and Yeager airports.

j

31inkecl to
intimidation·

CANTON (AP) -A man
accused of intimidating ·a black
family with homemade bottle
bombs was arrested on .a
felony ethnic intimidation
charge, police said.
Jonathan Muntean, 19,joins
two juveniles in facing charges
for allegedly placing bottle
bombs in Perry Township on
Jan.13.The three also face two
misdemeanor criminal darnago
ing charges.
No one was injured by the
opportunity to be informed bombs, but four of the devices·
which lesser-known candi- did explode outside the home
dates were running · with of Sharon Stewart-Flowers,
third- party
endorsements, her daughter and grandson.
"They are not terrorjzing
such as the Green Party. The
state's position allows Repub- anyone," Stewart-Flowers told
licans and Democrats to keep The Canton Repository. "No
voters in the dark about third- one here is afraid of them."
party challengers, said Terry
Lodge, lawyer for the Green
Party and Nader.
Appeals judges Richard
Suhrheinrich,
Alice
AKRON {AP) -- A man
Batchelder and Eugene Siler
who home schooled his chilJr. ruled unanimously Wednesdren while making · intense
day, just a day after receiving
demands· for achievement has
the case.

·-----------------------------------------'
j Green

Party still on ballot

, . CINCINNATI . (AP) ; Ohio'· had authority to list the
: name of presidential candidate
• Ralph Nader on the November
; ~000 ·ballot without his Green
: Party affiliation, a federal appeals
: court ruled Wednesday.
' Ohio officials said the 6th
: U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals'
: ruling upholds the state's posi; tion that it has authority to
i impose reasonable require; ments for ballot listings to
• ensure orderly, fair electi9ns.
'• The Green Party and Nader
l sued the state. They argued
: that keeping the party's desig: nation off the ballot violated
; their constitutional rights of
: free speech, free association
; and equal protection of law.
; They also said the state's
: refusal denied voters the

...

.' Attention!!!
,
I

'
• DoJ.ou need a job

or .E.D.? We are
here to help
''
'
you succeed in
,
doing that.
I•

•

''
•

•

Contact Cindy Shull
111 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohlo.45769

992-6600
' (740)
· Sminr . , , 14-21
I
I
I
I

lhunday, ,.nllllry 11, 2082 .

Dad found
in violation

acre grounds for industrial use.
At the state's request: the Energy
Department tested soil outside the
plant's grounds twice over the past few
mon~. s.aid Carol Hester, spokeswoman
for the Ohi9 B~--· ~ ·
The firsi review raised concerns about
the e~stence o~ !)mllilo~:~s materials, so a
second envirorunental assessment was
taken. Its results were released . Monday,
--• _ th I
Is f
.
sh owmg at ow 1eve o p1utoruum,
neptunium and mercury had· been
detected in soil samples, Hester said.
The Energy Department has said there
is no danger. But Brian Bl3ir, an environmental supervisor at the Ohio EPA's
southeast division, told The Columbus
Dispatch for a st9ry Wednesday that the

state is not c~nvinced.
"I'm not willing to accept there is no
problem:' he s.aid.
·
The Energy Department likely will
sell the property to the Southern Ohio
Diversification Initiative for a nominal ·
fee. But the group said !hat now it wants
an independent analysis. of the land to ·
determine whether it is more of a liabil. h . .
h
1ty t an 1t IS wort .
..
.
.
. d al" ·d G
. It potenually IS a b•g. e , Sal
reg
· S1momon, who heads the group.
' Dunng the Cold War, the plant produced weapons-grade ennched uramum
for national defense projects. At one
point, highly radioactive plutonium and
neptunium contaminated the plant.

beb~ convicted of violating a receives approval of the school ly shooting a 'M uskingum
court order that he stay away
from his 20-year-old daughter.
Thomas Lavery, 57, was
convicted Wednesday in
Akron Municipal Court of
trespass and violating a court
order and could soon face sentencing of up to seven months
in jail and a $1,250 fine.
He pleaded guilty last year
to felony attempted child ·
endangering and
misdemean or ·child endangering
through abusive behavior
while pressuring his children
into being high achievers. He
was sentenced to probation.
Marjory Lavery, now 20 and
studying and working at the
University of Akron, filed
child abuse charges againsr her
father in 1998, when she was
17. The youngest of Lavery's
five children, Kathleen, now
15, joined Marjory in pressing
the abuse charges.

board of the Akron public
schools. But such approval
would require the board to
abandon its policy against
sponsoring any charter school.
The school board expects to ·
review the contract before its
next board meeting Feb. 11,
the Akron Beacon Journal
reported Thursday.

Judge won't toss
q»nviction

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
judge on Wednesday refused
to throw out a commercial
photographer's conviction for
taking pictures of posed bodies
in a county morgue.
The judge said he would
rule later on whether to
uphold similar convictions of a
second defendant, former
Hamilton County deputy
corone~ Dr. Jonathan Tob.ias.
County Common . Pleas
Judge Norbert Nadel rejected
arguments that photographer
Thomas Condon was unfairly
AKRON (AP) - A con- tried and that there was not
tract is being written for a eno ugh evidence to support
'proposed teachers' union his convictions.
charter school to attract public
school high school dropouts
back into the classroom.
. The Akron Education Assoo
dation would be the only
ZANESVILLE (AP) - A
teachers' union in Ohio to
operate a charter school, if it man pleaded innocent to fatal-

Deal near for
charter school

Slaying suspect
.pleads innocent

Ynur

Chniet~

s4gg

County sheriff's deputy during a traffic stop.
Henry Hager, 27, of Grove
City· in suburban Columbus,
entered the plea at his arraignment Wednesday in Muskingum Counry Common
Pleas Court. He is ·charged
with one count of aggravated
murder and could be sentenced to death.
Authorities say Hager shot
Sgt. Robert Tanner Jr., 39,
after the . deputy pulleCI him
over Jan. 8.

One killed in
shooting
I

ZANESVILLE (AP)
Friends and coworkers said the
city school district's head
maintenance foreman and a
female school bus driver had .
an on-again, off-again relationship before he shot her
and killed himself.
· But it wasn't known what
specifically led to the shootings Wednesday morning.
Investigators said Rcinald
Melvin, 59, left two notes at
his home apologizing for the
shooting but giving no
·motive.
Deborah Law,. 41, was shot
three times in the back and
head and remai!U'd in critical
condition Thursday at · Good
Samaritan Medical Center.

111 the Bend

:The Daily Sentinel

Page Al

--------------~:r.~~~.~~-------lh_u_~~~·J-•nH~~~~1~,2~-

Hazardous niaterials·found near plant

F~,Feb.1

Sonny Pt. Clou&lt;t; Cloudy

Pip AI

•

Wi eS obesity Signals trouble or marrzage
'

..

,

DEAR ABBY: Your response to
"Frustrated Wife," ·who had gained
more than 100 pounds and whose
husband had moved to ,mother bedroom, was way out of line. If that
man really loved his wife, he would
urge her to go to counseling with
him, and go with her to diet clinic
where he could learn to support her
needs while overcoming her eating
problem, if that is, indeed, what she
· has.
Abby. I am lt)Ore than 100 pounds
' overweight. My husband . would
never, ever tell me it was food or
him and . to take my pick! He has
encouraged me to join hlm on walks
and eat healthier foods with him.
This should be something they do
together. This should be not orily a
healthier eating experience for her,
but a bonding experience for both

a

Rutland Garden
Club discusses
'Winter'
lUJTI.AND -"Winter" was
the program theme featured at
Monday night's meeting of the
Rutland Garden Oub held at the
home ofBetty Lowery.
. Marjorie Rice talked about
the role of herbs for medicinal
purposes and noted that herbs
are finding their way into
everyday health care. She said
that there continues to be studies exploring the safe use and
effectiveness of herbs. Rice also
touched the inherent beauty of
herbs and noted that those
used for therapeutic purposes
should orily be harvested by
commercial manufacturers.
She listed St. John's wort,
, Ginko-biloba, saw palmetto,
garlic and cone flowers as herbs,
noting that all have the poten. tial for allergic and adverse
reaction including interaction
. with prescription medications.
"It is prudent to check with
·· health care professionals before
: adding herbs to your health
care progr.un;' she added.
Joy Combs talked about Paul
; Echo and noted that it is because
, of his vision and ei!Ort 75 yean
: ago that the poinsettia has
; become the tr.tdilion fur the hoi: iday season all &lt;mr the world
: Combs gave a history of the
• poinsettia, which dates back to
1833, and of the founding of
; the Poinsettia Growen Poun: dation in 1991, and d~scribed
! the plant and.the care it needs
: to keep it attractive long after
: the holiday season.
: · Bi!ds, specifically the cardinal
: and the chickadee, we~ dis: cussed by Chelcie Stearns. She
: described the cardinal as a
: beautiful song bird which
: )labitates sheltered backyards
~ and parks and survives on
: insects, seeds and corn. Chick: adees have small tlutry· bodies
'~ and ·a blackcapped head and
: chin with white cheeks. .
.
Tapic of Betty ~ry's talk

!

.
have happened. I think her weight

is a compulsive overeater with a sen- off and moving out of the bedroom"
problem is just another symptom of ous problem. ft is an illness, Abby -- -- I'm sure the man would perform
the marriage heading downhill, not one that society doesn't recognize.
if he could. I wish' you could see the
just her love of food.-- CINDY IN
I agree the woman needs help, but mail on my desk from husbands who
ARIZONA
that wasn't the point of her letter. have complained-that they are either
DEAR CINDY: I'm printing She ·asked if her husband was justi- so visually turned off they can no
your letter because I received a fied in withl)olding sex. NO, HE IS longer do the deed, or are physically
bushel of mail from overweight NOT! I understand he may not like unable to perform because of their
women who felt I was wrong not to the fact that she has gained weight, wives' girth. (Women married to
ADVICE
take her side. I'm sorry if this sounds but to cut her off and move out of overweight husbands have expressed
cruel, but obesity has reached such the bedroom is horrible. Marriage similar stories.)
of them.
epidemic proportions in our coun- vows say "for better or for worse."-Remember, the woman wrote:
You advised her to see a wetitian try that the surgeon general has spo- REBECCA
IN
NEW "My husband has repeatedly asked
and then a psychotherapist, which ken out about it. It is a serious health . ORLEANS
me to lose weight, but I have not. ...
are good ideas for long-term help. issue. Obesity is a trigger for diaDEAR REBECCA: I agree the I think he expects too much, as I
However, I think the more appropri- betes, heart disease and several forms )¥oman is a compulsive overeater, love to eat."That woman needs help,
ate action for her - and her loving of cancer. I refuse to keep my mouth and there are organizations that can not another enabler.
husband -- is marriage counseling. shut about it because speaking out is help her. (I have recommended
(Pauline Phillips and her daughter
It takes many months to gain more politically incorrect. My job is to Overeaters Anonymous for years.) ]ean11e Phillips share the pseudonym
than 100 pounds, and for her hus- give readers honest answers. Read Notice that she didn't ask for a refer- Abigail V.m BHren. Write Dear Abby at
band to just now be having a prob- on:
raJ for a self-help group.
www.DearAbby.corn or PO. Box
lem means something more must
DEARABBY:Thatpoorwoman
As to the husband's ·"cutting her 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

Dear ·
Abby

was "Identical Cousins;' the ~ ~ fur the meeting. Don
presented devotions.
wooded areas, and the downey · Wes of lhe Zion Church of
woodpeckers who prefer to Olri1t ptrNided retreshrnents.
travel with chickadees and·
nuthatches during the winter.
The gardcni!lg hint for the ·
meeting was feed the birds,
feed house plants, and c~eck
dahlia bulbs and glad crorns.
Pauline Atkins conducted
REEDSVILLE -- Frances
the meeting with Lowery giv- Reed, Grace Weber and Gladys
ing devotional readings, "Car- Thomas hosted a recent meetdinals in the Snow.""The Win- ing of the Riverview Garden
dow of Tomorrow;' and "We Club held at the Reed home.
Thank You, Oh Lord.''
Margaret Grossnickle had
Members answered roll .call the devotions with "Trees" as
with the names of birds at her topic. A memorial was
their feeders. The traveling given for Ella Osborne, who
prize furnished by Atkins was had been a longtime member
won by Rice. Combs will of the club. Siient prayer was
provide tbe one for the Feb- held and members told of
ruary meeting. It W..s reported Interesting remembrances of
that Atkins and Lowery took her d11ring her lifetime.
flowers to ' their churches.
Rulli Anne Balderson, ptesident, we}l;omed the guests
al:l6nding, Sylvia Webb, Ruby
Osborne and Zita McCain.
Roll call was answered with
POMEROY -- Meigs members and guesa telling their
County Men's Fellowship favorite winter memories.
elected officers for the year Among them were memories of
when it met Monday night at the snow storm in 1950, sleigh
the Zion Church of Christ.
riding on John Boring hill, and
They are Harley Johnson, of walking across the frozen
president; Art Hess, vice presi- Ohio river in the 1930s. School
dent; Roger Alkire, treasurer; children from the Reedsville
and Jim Eaton, secretary. The grade school made the trip
·members decided to have across the river with each holdtheir booth . at the Meigs. ing tO a rope for safety.
County Fair again this year.
F9r the program, an auction
Membership in the organiza- was held with Mary Alice
lion is open to men in the Chris- Bise serving as the auctiontian Churches and Churches of eer. Dirk Kriess donated a
Christ in Meigl County.
calendar featuring pictures of
The schedule of meetings the Delta Queen, Mississippi
adopted fur 2002 is feb. 25, Queen and American Queen.
Pomeroy Church of Christ;
Ruby Osborne received the
M:uch 25, Middleport Church door prize. A buffet was
of Christ;April22 and May 27, served to those named and
Ohio Valley Christian Assembly; Margaret Cauthorn, Janet
June 17, Dexter Church of Carnally, Delores Prark,
Christ;July 22,Bndbury Church Marilyn · Hannum, Wendy
of Christ; Aug. 26, Colwnbia Hannum, Marlene Putman,
Chapel; _Sept. 23, OVCA:, Oct. ·Maxine White )lead, Janice
29, Hemlock G1011e Christian Young, Nola Young and
Church; Nov. 25, Zion Church Pauline Myers.
of Christ; and Dec. 16, PomeroY
The next meeting will be
Church of Christ.
Feb. 28 at Hickory Hills
Duane Stanley ofered the open- Church Of Christ.

LOCAL EVENTS

hairy woodpeckers who live in Lambert

Community Calan!Sar 11
publllhed aa a free Hrvlce to
non-profit grou~ wl1hlng to
announce meetlnga and apecia! events. The calendar 11
not de1lgned to promote
saleil or funcl-ralaera of any
type. ltemt~ are printed only
aa apace permlta and cannot
be guarantead to be printed a
apeclllc number of daya.

Riveniew
Garden Club
meets

THURSpAY
POMEROY ·- Town and
country EXPO organizational
meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs . Fairgrounds grange

annex.
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Family and Children
First Council meeting, Thurs·
day, 9 a .m. in the lhird floor
meeting room of the Meigs
County Department of Job and
Family Services, Middleport.

GALLIPOLIS - Board of
Directors of Gallia·Meigs
Community Action Agency
to meet at 6 p .m., Holiday
Inn, for bi·monthly meeting .
Public invited . Annual din·
ner to follow the meeting for
board members, staff and
guests.

FRIDAY
POMEROY- Meigs County
Chapter PERl to meet at
Meigs County Multipurpose
Center, Friday. Lunch at noon,
followed by program. Dues to
be paid.

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878,
Saturday,
'
potluck supper, 6:30 p.m.,
regular meeling and degree
team practice , 7:30 p.m.

•

Fellowship
elects officers

stylish sof~ts

now at

incredible

savings

While thoylutl Saw oa 1 fantutlc oelecdon of
La·Z.BO)"' oofu at lncndlblo cloannco prlcul
Cboou from. all th.e lawt •tyle, colon, 1111.d fabrle~l

.

REVIVAL

january 28th- February 1st

7:00PM\

·

~~ with Dr, johWamblln ~~

W

of DearJ?orn Michigan W

Tbe.re'J nna betn a better
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�The Daily Sentinel
&amp;tern teams honored, Page 82
Super Bowl notebook, Page BJ
College hoops, Page 86

Page .B1

'•

1hund.y, ..n...ry ]1, 2002

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Coach Jim O'Brien, who has taken
overlooked teams to a Final Four berth,
a Big Ten co-championship and a thirdplace finish in the last three years, says it
is' the- basics thai ·have given the Buckeyes an edge.
' .
"! think two 1hings have been pretty
constant," he said in his customary rasp.
. "They have played exceptionally hard,
especially on the defensive end, and I
really believe they take an unselfish
·approachonoffense. lfyou cangetyour
guys to play as hard as they can defensively and play unselfishly on offense, it's
a pretty good thing."
Four-year starting guard Brian
Brown averages 15.2 points a gaine and
usually ends up with the ball when the
Buckeyes most need a bucket or a big
play. Swingman Bohan Savovic and

Please ' " •uckeyes, 85

Please sH Tribe, 85

: Aramboles, 20, was acquired
from the New York Yankees in
the Mark Wohlers trade last ·
year.
: Ararnboles was a combined
~-9 with a 4.09 ERA in 20
starts and two relief appearances with Class A Tampa,
Class A Dayton, Double-A
Chattanooga and Triple-A
Columbus.

'Night Train'
Lane dies at 73
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) Dick "Night Train" Lane
hounded wide receivers with
his ferocious tackles and quarterbacks with his interceptions.
An undrafted free agent
who would· become one of
the greatest defensive backs in
NFL history during his 14year career, Lane died after a
heart attack at the assisted living facility where he lived. He
was 73.·
·

Terry Glenn
suing NFL

__ _

Meigs County's
Oldest
Newspaper

The
Daily
Sentinel
111

•

I

992-9200
949-4900

/~
- .:__
" ~~
.
'

MAYFIELD HEIGHTS,
(AP) - When Cleveland
Indians general manager
Mark Shapiro traded Roberto
Alomar last month, he
quipped that he'd need to don
a flak jacket.
He said Wednesday that the
wrath of Indians fans hasn't
been quite
that bad. But
Shapiro and
owner Larry
Dolan have
had to spend
the offSeason
trying
to
explain their
shift from a
Thome
power hitring, superstar-laden team to 4 pitchingfocused dub that plays "small
baiL"
First baseman Jim Thome is
really the last of the Tribe's big
bat attack.
'
And the concept hasn't resonated well with fans.
"We've taken a lot of heat.
Some of my e-mail has been
awful," Dolan said at a luncheon Wednesday with fans
and media.
"Baseball and sports in 'general are an entity that people
don't want to react intellectually to," Shapiro said. "They
don't wani to hear the reasoni~g .behind it. They're emotional about it.
"It's hard to talk with ration
ahd reason about things people don't want to be reasonable about."
Shapiro traded Alornar in an
eight-player deal and allowed
run-producer Juan Gonzalez
to leave as a free agent, along
with veterans Kenny Lofton,
Dave Burba and Marty Cordova.
Dolan told Shapiro to trim
$15 million off las t season's
$91 million payroll and said
Wednesday that he's trying to
am;mble a winning team that
is financially responsible.

day.

\,

.

ball'

. CINCINNATI (AP) -.
Right-hander Ricardo Aramboles agreed to. terms of a
one-year contract with the
Cincinnati Reds on Wednes-·

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NEWYORK (AP) - New
England wide receiver TerlY
Glenn sued the NFL, saying it
: discriminated against him £or ·
a disability that prevented him
from following certain rules
in the league's substance abuse
policy.

Big Ten may
change
timekeeping
. EAST LANSING, Mich.
(AP) - Michigan athletic
director Bill Martin said
Wednesday that the Big Ten is
evaluating changing the way
the official time is kept in
1football games.
. Martin said Big Ten commissioner Jim Delaney has
suggested the official time be
kept on the field by a conference official who serves as. the
television time-out coordinator. That method is used by the
Southeastern
Conference, ·
Martin said.
: The Big Ten will host a ,
A-.eeting of conference athletic
wrectors and faculty representatives Feb. 18-19 in Chicago.
1!;1artin said· Delaney could
. ~ke the game-111anagement
~hange himself without a vote.
• Big Ten schools have hired
people to keep time during ·
games, which led to controversy last season after host
Michigan State beat Michigan
26-24 on TJ. Duckett's touch"own catch as time expired.
To· make the play possible,
~he officials kept one second
on the doc~ when quarterback Jeff Smoker spiked the
ball after scrambling for one
yard with about 10 seconds
left.
Michigan coach Lloyd Carr
was livid after the ·game, and
later vowed that a change
would be made in how time is
kept.
The Big Ten never made a
statement about the finish of
that game. The conference has
made statements when otlid'lls
have made errors.
.
. "That play should . never
have been allowed to be run;•
Carr said after the play. "Obviously, the clock in the last 10
seconds, _there's a m;Uor error
there, and something needs to
be done about ·it."

•

OF COURSE THEY'RE GOOD- Ohio State coach Jim O'Brien shouts Instructions to his players during the second half of
.the Buck,eyes' 7~7 upset win over 12th ranked Illinois Tuesday in Columbus . (AP)

Bucks no real surprise
COLUMBUS (AP) - Sooner or
later, every Ohio State win won't be
considered an upset and the Buckeyes'
rising victory wtal won't be a surprise.
• ~
•
., .
For, .~ow, however,
that seems tO be the
plight of a team that,
despite going 16-3
and sharing the Big Ten lead, is barely
clinging to the final spot in the Top 25.
No. 12 Illinois and coach Bill Self
became the latest converts on Tuesday
night in a 78-67 loss. The lllini, ranked
as high as No. 2 this season, spent all but
2 112 minutes of the second half facing
a double-figure deficit.
"You return seven of your top eight
off an 11-5 team in the league last year,
I can't say that they shouldn't be here,"
Self said of the Buckeyes.
Just I 0 days earlier, the Buckeyes
knocked off then-No. 25 Indiana 73-

NCAA

67. Ohio State and the Hoosiers are
tied for the conference lead.
. Even though Ohio State is 3-0
against ranked teams this year - beat.iqg then-No. 9 Iowa i72-62 on Jan. 5.by
overwhelming the Hawkeyes 20-2 at
the outset- there are always doubters.
Some say the Buckeyes are a product
of a cushy early schetlule that has them
playing six of their first nine conference
games at Value City Arena, where they
are 25-4 in Big Ten games and 11-2
against ranked opponents.
Some say Ohio State - not figured
to be among the top five teains in the
league ~ has precisely what it takes to
slog through a down year in the Big
Ten: The Buckeyes play stifling defense,
seldom take a bad shot and can trot in
five quality perimeter players, all of
whom are capable of shooting 3-pointers.

No shocker: Belichick ·
chooses to start Brady
. NEW ORLEANS (AP)- New England
PatriotS coach Bill Belichick wanted to make
sure Tom Brady is healthy.
Everything else, he already
knows.
Belichick chose Brady to
start at quarterback in the
Super Bowl against the St.
Louis Rams, passing on
Drew Bledsoe for the poised
former backup who won
Bledsoe's job - and each of
Brady
the Patriots' last eight games.
"Tom Brady demonstrated
in practice that he is fit to play," Belichick said
Wednesday after Brady showed no lingering
problems from an ankle injury that knocked

him ou; of the AFC title game. "He will be
our starting quarterback on Sunday."
The decision means Bledsoe may have
played his last game for the team that made
him the first overall pick in 1993 and gave
him a 10-year, $103 million contract last
summer that remains the richest in NFL history.
.
Neither quarterback was available for comment after being informed of the decision by
Belichick.
Belichick chose Brady with the !99th
overall pick of the 2000 draft. The Patriots
carried him on the roster all of last season as
a rare fourth quarterback, but by this summer,
'

Pluse·sH 8r8dy, 86

DUB.JNG GUNSUNGERS - Patriots quarterbacks Drew Bledsoe, left, and Tom Brady practice for Sunday's Super Bowl. (AP)

Akron edges Ohio, 74-73, to win third straight
consecutive games. Bo":ling
They're still in last place in Green beat Western Michigan·
the East Division, but die · 78-6&amp; and Northern Illinois
Akron
got by Toledo 95-91 in overZips have time in other MAC action.
become
Fre5hnian Darryl Peterson
one of had another strong game for
the
. Akron (7-13, 3-6) with 27
hottest
points, including two winning
teams in free throws with 2.3 · seconds
the M,id-Ameri~ left. He has 87 points in his
can Conference.
last four games, including 29
Akron edged Ohio 74-73 against Ball State in the game
Wednesday night for its third before the .Zips .began their
straight victory after starting winning streak.
conference play by losing six
BY THE ASsOCIATED PRESS

,.

Peterson got the chance to
Hipsher said there was no
score the winning points after question that the foul call on
being fouled by Patrick Flomo was the correct deciFlomo while attempting to Slon.
take a long inbound pass from
"He (Peterson) definitely
David Falknor.
got fouled," the Zips coach
.. Falknor was a former said. "Officials don't like to
basebiUJ pitcher and he made make a call like that late, but
a great throw to get around you have to call it when 1a
(0hio's Brandon) Hunter on guy's clubbed."
the in-bounds play;• Akron
Ohio coach Tim O'Shea
coach Dan Hipsher said. said he was surprised by the
"Peterson made a heck of ? call, but didn't indicate any
catch and got clubbed from . disagreement with it.
"In a non-shooting sjtuabehind:'

tion it's unusual to see a call
like that," he said. "You tell your kid' to play aggressively
on defense, but that's (the late
foul call) nothing you. expect
to see at home as a coach:'
A 3-point basket by Andy
Hipsher with nine seconds
left had put Akron ahead 7271 1but Hunter gave Ohio the
lead back at 73-72 on a basket
with 2.7 seconds left. Peter. son's free throws came fourtenths of a second later.

PIHHIHMAC, 85

�'

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thu~y.Jin.31,20Q2

Page 83

.:jhe Daily Sentinel

toumey team~ hono~.

11. 2002

•

r.

I•

I
'

SUPER BOWL
NOTEBOOK
BIG GAME BRINGS otn BEST
SIORIES IN PLAYERS, COACHES

"

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - One Super Bowl participant
; used to haul 75-pound bags of coffee beans in the wilting
'· heat. Another is related to Eve! Knievel.
.One is a former All-Pro
receiver who had to \rohimeer
a year to get a job in coaching. Another is making a new
name for hirruelf ~fter his
own fans ttied to chase him
.
oftown,
Every season, the Super Bowl
, brings together a collection of players and coaches with sto,. ries of heartbreak, comebacks, rejection and rejuvenation.
,...
People like kicker Adam Vinatieri and receiver David Patl
ten of the Pattiots, and defensive lineman Leonard Little and
~ receivers coach Henry Ellard of the Rams.

EAGLE PRIDE - Athletes•
from Eastern High School's
2001 softball and 2000..01!•
boys basketball teams (both
OHSAA tournament semifinalists) were honored and
presented with commemorative rings prior to Tuesday's
boys basketball game in ·
Tuppers Plains. Banners
recognizing the team mem:
bers, coaches and managers were also hung in the
Eastern gymnasium.

I.

•

I•

•

Dally Sentinel. photos by
Jon Wfll
·

•
•

~

MAKING THE LEAP

Cool under press. u, re must run in ihe family with Adam
Vinatieri.
'
Born and raised ·in South Dakota, Vinatieri is a distant
: cousin of daredevil Eve] Knievel and great, great grandson of
~ General George Custer's bandmaster, Felix Vinatieri.
•
"He left them back when they went into the Batde ofLittie Big Horn;'Vinatieri said. "Thank goodness.".
~
A century and a half later, the Patriots are the benefactors
from old Felix Vinatieri's wise decision. Who else, after all,
could have made that 45-yard field goal in a blizzard against
the Raiders?
The kick, and the "easy" 23-yarder that won the game in
overtime, have already elevated Vinatiet'i into one of New
England's greats. The sixth-year kicker is also gaining wide
recognition as one of the most clutch performers in NFL
playoff history.
Kickers are a different bunch, of course, but Vinatieri
always tties to keep it real. Unlike many at his position, he
has shunned superstitions, for fear they might mess up the
already complicated routine most kickers employ.
But there must be a story behind that heavy beard, right?
Normally a dean-shaven sort, Vinatieri insists it was no idea
of his.
"It started before the first playoff game," he said." After we
beat the Raiders, my teammates told me I better not shave."

.r~.

=

Karl Malone·delivers his 34,000th point
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

to 34,000 agains.t the Bulls,
Karl Malone's teammates are shooting 5-for-14 and reachalready focusing on the Mail- ing the mark on a free throw
next - with 1:27 to play.
man's
scoring mile~'Milestones, I kind oflike to
stone.
get them over with so you can
Malone
think about playing the game
scored 18 points, putting him of basketball," Malone said.
squorely at 34,000 points in his "But that's a lot of points:'
17-yeat career, as the Utah
Malone, 38, ranks second on
Jazz beat the Chicago BuDs the NBA's ,career scoring list,
90-78 Wednesday night.
trailing only Kareem Abdui"It's crazy. He's a very great Jabbar (38,387). At his current
player, and I hope he gets scoring average of 23.6, the
40,000," Andrei Kirilenko Mailman might reach Abdul'd
,
531 .
Jabbar near the end of the
Malone ~truggled to make it 2003-04 season.

NBA

"I don't know what else.J'd McGrady each scored 22
be doing right now," Malone points to lead the Magic, who
said. "You can only hunt so have lost seven straight to the
much, fish so much, drop the Lake~.
kids off so much at school. So
76ers 96,
I choose to work, and it pays
Timberwolves 91
pretty decent, too."
Allen Iverson scored 38
John Stockton had 16 points points and Derrick Coleman
and 10 assists, Kirilenko scored added 18 points and nine
15 points and Bryon Russell rebounds, leading Philadelphia
added 14 as Utah beat Chica- over visiting Minnesota.
go for the ninth str;~ight time
Dikembe Mutombo's putin the regular season.
.back of a miss by Eric Snow
Eddie Robinson led the broke an 88-88 tie with 56.4
Bulls with 18 points. A.J. Guy- · seconds left, and Ive~on hit a
ton added 14, but the BuDs long jumper to make it 92-88
lost for the fifth time in six with 18.7 remaining. lve~on
games and dropped to 1-21 on then iced it with a pair of free
the road this season.
throws.
The teams combined for 30
Wally Szczerbiak had 31
steals, with Utah posting a sea- poinis for Minnesota, which
son-high 16. But it was a slop- has lost four of five after wirrPY night, with the BuDs com- ning 11 of 12.
mitting 22 turnovers and the
Pacers 83, GrizZlies 82
Jazz 20.
Reggie Miller· hit two 3!.akers 111, Magic 93
pointers in the final minute -,
Shaquille O'Neal had 30 his only field goals of the game
points and 14 rebounds, and - and host Indiana used a
Kobe Bryant had 12 of his 23 game-ending 17-3 run to beat
points in the fourth quarter as Memphis.
Los Angeles won at Orlando.
Jo]en Rose scored 25 points
The
Lakers
outscored and Jermaine O'Neal had 17
Orlando. 18-2 to open the points and 11 rebounds for the
final period, as the Magic Pacers, who trailed by 13 with
missed their first nine shots.
4 1/2 minutes left in the
Pat · Garrity "and Tracy game.
Shane Battier had 27 points

for Memphis.·
Pistons 88, Hawks 71
Jerry Stackhouse had 32
points and Ben Wallace added
10 points and a season-high 19
rebounds to help host Detroit
beat 'slumping Adant;l.
Detroit won its fourth in a
row and the 2,000th game in
franchise history, becoming the
sixth team to reach that milestone. The Hawks have lost five
straight and 11 of 12.
Jason Terry led Adanta with
19 points, while Hawks AllStar Shareef Abdur-Rahim had
just 10 on 4-of-14 shooting.

FolloW
all your
favorite

teams in:

lhe··

NEW YORK (AP) - The lineup of "Walk On."
on a Fox tailgate special before the
_musical acts at the Super Bowl i• w long- "Can you imagine what it feels like to pregame show.
that you might think. the football game be Irish and be at·'the most American of
Elton John is to perfonn at the NBA
was t~e- Jideshow.
occasions"? It's most overwhelming:• said All-Star game Feb. 10. That weekend also
The NFL says it will be the most enter- Bono, U2's lead singer, at ~ news confer- will include performances by Britney
tainment-packcd Super Bowl ever, with ence in New Orleans on Wednesday.
Spears, Sean "P. Diddy" Combs and Alicia
performances by U2, Paul McCartney.
"We've had an incredible year in Amer~ Keys.
Mariah Carey;Mary J. Blige, Marc Antho- ica," he said." And post Sept. 1 to have
Entertainment has always been part of
ny and others - not jus~ on Super Bowl our album mean so much to people who the Sllper Bowl. In its early years, in the
/iunday, but throughout the w~ekend.
are not U2 fans is very special to ine."
1960s, '70s and even '80s, th~t mainly
Part of the reason for the celebrity · Besides patriotism, the strong star pres- meant performers such as Up With Peoovet:flow is a pattiotic theme after the ence also reflects a growing trend at pie, cartoon characters or the Rockettes.
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, which caused major sporting events toward partnering , It wasn't until Michael Jackson's ratihe Super Bowl to be pushed !1ack a music with sports to boost the ratings and. ings-grabbing performance at the 1993
week.
broaden the audience of both.
halftime show that A-JiJq performers
"With the events of September 11th,
Last year's Super Bowl halftime show started taking notice. .
.
we've redefined and refocused the game featured Aerosmith, 'N Sync, Britney
"That was the turning point in securpresentation, and the theme is celebration Spears, Nelly and Blige in an MTV-pro- ing major entertainment stars to perof the human spirit and the values of duced extravaganu. At the NBA Fmals form," McCarthy said, adding that the
freedom, and also to everyday heroes," last :rear, Destiny's Child; U2 and Sugar potentially huge audience was a powerful
NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said.
Ray performed during halftime.
lure to musicians.The Sup~r Bowl is gen"And with that in mind, we sought out
"Musical acts, including those that we erally seen by an average of 90 million
the entertainment community. They have this year, do help hold the audience viewers in the United States.
sought us out as well."
during the pregame and also during half
"It was a very easy pitch to U2's manM~Cartney is expected to sing his Sept. time," McCarthy said.
agement."
.
It-inspired song "freedom" during the
Gregg Winik,.executive vice. president
Although Blige is a platinum- selling
pregarne show, which wiD also feature of NBA entertamment, satd tymg chart- artist, she sounded almost grateful to be
· Barry Manilow singing "Let Freedom topping performers to the games helps involved in the Super Dow! for a second
Ring" with Patti LaBelle, Wynonna and bring in fringe fans.
. year.
others. Carey will sing the national
As they dtd last year, Super Bowl must"There's a lot of people who don't
anthem and Blige and Anthony will sing cal performances this weekend will actu- know who Mary J. Blige is, and that's
"America the Beautiful," all of them ally kick off Friday, with No Doubt, Ja why I'm so thankful," she said. "They're
backed by the Boston Pops. U2 is to pro- Rule. Martina McBride and othe~ per" helping me to be introd\JCed into anotbvide the halftime entertainment, singing forming on a CBS special. No Doubt .and er world, another group of people."
three songs, including the inspirational the Darenaked Ladies are also performing

r.

Super Bowl sponsors turn nostalgic
'

'

NEW YORK (AP) the game was "a little south of
Cadillac tuned up a classic $2 million." That would be
1959 Eldorado and borrowed down from the revised $2.1
a 30-year-old rock anthem for million ;werage that industry
its hew Super Bowl ads.
insiders say CBS got a year
Pop star Britney Spears ago.
reprises Pepsi's jingles dating as
Both prices are below the
fa&lt; back as the 1950s. And tax record $2.2 million average
preparer H&amp;R Block plays 'a that ABC said it got in 2000,
version of an aptly named when 17 dot- com advertisers
Beades'.. tune from 1966 in its flush 'with venture capital
first appearance in .the big bought 40 percent of the comLeonard Little wanted to quit football.
show.
mercia! time. The dot-com
Little drove drunk on Oct. 19, 1998, his 24th birthqay,
' s·o me Super Bowl advertis- bust later that year saw many
and got into an accident that resulted in the death of
ers ·are hoping to score points fail, and some who survived
Susan Gutweiler, 47. He pleaded guilty to involuntary
Sunday on television's biggest have not been back.
manslaughter, a plea that included a jail sentence.
and most expensive attraction
But even at just under S2
When the case was settled, Little went home for the
of the year by stirring warm million for 30 seconds, the
rest of the season. On the week of his scheduled return
nostalgic feelings among the Super Bowl towe~ over the
•m~l999; Mothers ~gail'lst;Drunk Briving'lreld a protest• '130 million vie\ve~ expected 5400,000 that ad . buyers say
rally outside the dome in St. Louis. A reserve linebacker
to watch at least pari of the top-rated series shqws get.
.
at the .time, he played mostly on special teams. An awkNFL championship game.
Nielsen Media Research said
ward silence enveloped the dome whenever he made a
Ad salesmen at the Fox net- ·.. Friends" has been the highest
play.
· .
·
work, which is broadcasting rated prime-time series so far
Little's role has grown. He moved to defensive end for
the game between St. Louis this season with a 15 rating; last
the Rams and became their pass-rush specialist this year.
and New England from New year's Super Bowl had a 40.4.
He had 14 112 sacks in the regular season and will almost
Orleans, may be pining for Each rating point represents
certainly sign a big free-agent contract after the Super
yesteryear, too.
about 1.06 million homes.
Bowl.
The recession, a pullback in · Nielsen estimated the Super
Slowly, he feels, the fans have forgiven.
ad spending and competition Bowl's average audience was
"You can't judge a person by one situation," he said. "I
for ad ~udgets from the Win- 84.3 miUipn, ve~us 24.3 milthink people in the community are starting to know me
ter Olympics in Salt Lake City lion for "Friends."
,. more. And knowing me, knowing 'Yhat kind of person I
starttng five days later have
Besides the big audiences
am, they ·know I'm not a bad, person."
depressed Super Bowl ad ' and high prices, the Super
:. For a while after the tragedy, Little thought about
prices. Some marketers won- Bowl bas become know~ .as a
never playing football again. Then, he thought about it in
der if Americans are ready to showcase for advert!Slng.
r a different light .
.
party after the Sept. 11 attacks Newspapers write about the
:
"Why try to run away from your problems instead of
and amid war in Afghanistan. ads and some people conSider
• face them head-on?" he said.
Fox still had "a couple or Super Bowl ads part of the
'• Little realizes now that success on the football field has . three" half-minute commer- entertainment.
• had its bonuses, but he will never get over what hap cia! spots left Tuesday from the
"It is the most heavily
'
r pened. He thinks about it every day.
60 available in the game, viewed program of the year
;
"But I had to get to the point where I had to do what's
according to Jon N esvig, head and some people will be
: best for my family and what's best for the people I love,"
of ad sales for Fox Broadcast- watching just for the ads," satd
: he said. "That was playing football, and doing the best I
ing. The telecast usually sells Gretchen Hoffinan, a market; can to contribute to this team."
out earlier.
ing execut1ve for .the first-time
He said the average price in Super Bowl advertiser Univer'

STARTING OVER

IIIII Ill TIIES·WUT I 111111

10 1111111 UBITEN .
Y81R ·lOID
CIIPITEIIZEIImlll Ill WCTIDIIC Flllll
Will IEFIIIS II I IITTEI • IIYS Dl 1. .:
IEPII.II II TIE IIIICES YM 1.1.11

INCOME TAX IIV DANTU
IS TIE RIIIT e•cE
33 105 H1l;md Roa d. Po mero y. OH

(740) 992-9355

SPECIAL DELIVERY - Jazz
forward Karl Malone, with
ball, scored his 34,000th
career point Wednesday. (AP)

'

.-(.

'

'
3Diamond·
Pendant

'
'

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.... dlllanct
• soo .....,.to-moille mlnutft

FREE II

•100 · - - ..........

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Parking

Mon • S1t8 to 5
Frld11V 9·7

\

FLAIR

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

111

Reg. $8.99

Onlv

$ 29

~·

1l!«44ett s~

Looney Tunet
- ~20z.

Reg. $1.19

Onlv

83¢

Reg. $9.99

Onlv

120z.

kenneth McCullouCJh, R. Ph.
Charles Rime, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992~2955
112 East Main Street
POmeroy, Ohio

FRE;E

Layawa'y

wv
,

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$699

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Special
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'IIRAND I'IAM!t l'lJANJTtJRI!. AT DISCOUNT PRICES'

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ELVIS

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from us and we'll give you the pad

•-

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eioeJcte~

.....,.., .....................,..................... ·

f

This year, it bought 58 commercial spots over 17 days in
the Olympics telecast to provide more detail on its serVIces.
"The Super Bowl established
who we are," said LaWanda
Burrell, a top advertising executive at EDS. "This year we
want to get more into the
specifics of what we are."
Brewer Anheuser-Busch will
be the biggest sponsor this year
with five minutes of ads . Pepsi
has three minutes, including
one minute tOr reformulated
Lipton Brisk. A half-dozen stu- ·
dios will pitch their movies

~~~";,. ~

1000 nllhf: 1nd wen.nd mlnutn
IOQ anytlfnl' minutes

;114 ct .$299·,
.,...~.~ ,ct. $449
1,

sal Orlando Resort.
Past Super Bowl sponsors
skipping the game this year
include FedEx Corp., MasterCard International, Volkswagen
of America, Cingular Wireless
and Electronic Data Systems.
The timing wasn't right for
FedEx, a sponsor each of the
four previous years, said
spokeswoman Carla Richards
from Memphis. "We started a
new campaign in October,"
she said.
EDS, the technology consultant from Plano, Texas, had
run ads featuring wandering
cats and stampeding squirrels
in the past two Super Bowls.

It '

•4

'·

HOURS
Mon-Fr18 am - 9 PIT!
Sat. Sam- Spm
Sun. lOam -4pm

�•

1

·Page 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mldcllilpoit, Ohio

Thu...Uy, Jlln. 31, 2002 •

• Tttur.dliy, Jan. 31,2002

•~ =...~~ =

. fiU"9-

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

•

,
;

~1 ~

~: \111411
1
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=....-.-

~
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•
•

In One Week Wltll us·· . . . .,&lt;....
REACH OVER 2.5,000 PROSPICTS
AD

n:

'

Blooll, brick. p1poo,
Wind&lt;IWo. llntoll, otc. Clludo

..
•

..
" 2. ..
.
'

•
••
•
•

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•

Wlntort, Rio Grandt, OH
C811740o245-5121 .

fill% Well Puppfoo. Paron
on P....-. Alto Pupplo~
to Give Away. (740)3688839 D&lt;(740l318-91117.

·::· AKC

.

8~:~18Da,
ck.

Regi-ld

~·

.

••
••

CFA Hlmaloyon KIHona,

Coif
oftor 6pm
(740)448-3t8ll

-

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from...._ 81

....

power rQJWard Zach Williams
Honda
· ~re ro
playersd who play
11169
850 . ltl'12 Chevy 31~ Ton for
pa ""'
sticky
eJJK
an average in
750
52
f:o~o0: ~':.i Muot
~ Ptuo r.M double
res.
· (304)773-8t30 "'
·»,..,o1'n
""''
1884 S·tO. 52895. 11197 (304)n3-5S82
a rd B ren t D a.?
Rangor,$3495. f993Rang- 1 _ 7 ~·TRX40DF- who .
de 16-of-18 free
.... $2295. 1987 Ford XLD
~ ~~
-~ t'-'.:.!...-d had 22
..
.
_
Slvorado
man,
Llko
New,
$3800.
•uvw•
po10ts 10
•
11795 1986
44
New GM 350 motor ,;.~· t999 Honda TRX300 Four· the wl
against Illinois, is a
1987 S-to 11695 · cooK- •IK. 4x4, Very Cleon and slasher who 1.5 never afrat'd to
MOTORS. (7,40)44li-oto3
Excolllnt, $2900. 11199 Suzu~ DS60 ~~~ Bike, Very take a shot under. pressure.
11197 Chevy S.tO Pick-up Nlr:e, Stt50. 2000 ,Suzuki
D
.
th
d
.
f
Slat*M. Bed Black. 801&lt;. 5 JRSO Mini Bike, Uke New,
esp!te
e gra uatton o
opaed, 4 C)'l. $41195. t994 Stooo. (740)245-2453 daya, . Ken 1~lmson, the Big Ten's
Ford .Ranger, Sport Modal (740)S39-391Itanyllme,
· f'li.
·
d
4 C)'l. 5 opaed, 52495.
A~•=
car~~;J,ade.r 10 blocke shots,
Auto SliM. (740)448-8172,
AClEiiOIUES
the· fr1~ckeyes aren't soft
(740)992•949 ' ·
touc~~ in the paint. O'Brien
1997, F-150,
Extended
Cab,
8•...,.
p---•
1 1 rotates 7 -100t
"
..~ .. seam ess y
511 000 oao. (304) 876_ ...,...
41194
~~~~~,:-.,:,~ Velimir Radinovic, 6-9 freshV.w; &amp;
·1 Rebuild Kito, 740o245·5677. man Terence Dials and 6-8
4-WDs
• Cell: 33"' 3765'
Will ( Dudley underneath.
Radinovic is a skinny shotIIORSAu

58

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• g=~~ or
••
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. •o l

••

·. B•~eves
~.

Auto S.lal, ..,_ 88 - . 4&amp;4, LT Pldt·
In Racine, Ohio. age, 1740)448-3844 dayl or
hoot~ used care end (140)448-11551i_,qo
Wo c.ny I
comp1o1e uno o1 Mobl"&lt;
'l'ituaai
~
o1 1 ,.,.._
eluding hi lfftclency

•
:

We Cove

- V I·

350
F - Angelfish Buy t !::!,,F ite~~· ~~~: - ~
•• or
992·3394 or 742· .
IMPRoVI!Mii:Nili .
~- Buy 50. c 740~ $3450.00
3020
.
·
• -&lt;~pm.

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

m
.w.&amp;II..E. AN. All
Successful Ads

, .

11"

HmPWANIID

11'

Ugh! Oacofta. Attenlion Ladles. Full Service
Male Esoorts. ~rompt Profooslonol Dlocreet &amp; Confl·
, dontial. 6pm to Gam. 2homsclloofo~~~ boyotte ~ clean pollee roc:onl, good
(740)388·1 799.
e 2 ·~"a r -~ work history,- trano- - - - : - - - - a n d oummer montha. portltlon,ll-tOyoolldrfving
Why walt? Stan meeting (740)367·7152, leave mea· OJCPOriencowMgoodrecord
Ohio llngleotonighl. can toll oage ~no answer.'
· (need 2), one . for guard
tree 1-800·7611-2623 ext Beautician
&amp;
Help house does not requlra as
11121.
Nltdecl. ' Paid Vacation/ stringent driving rocOfd,
Hourly Wage va. Comml.. home phonund must hovt
ANN&lt;xiN&lt;l!Mi!Nr slon Free CEU hours block oteel toe ltfoty lfloeS.
(740)448-7267
' ~oy starts at $8.50 por
1-,~-------'
hour, 32-40 110\Jra par week.
A Shoppe • ~ dl
Domino's Pizza of Point Coli 740-689-2674 MondayweDaite, ~~rc~~~~~ 5'; ~leasha,ntJEFie a n oriW 1n~e 1d Fpolrt~~tam·4pm for op.
80% off manufacturer's aug- now ung u • me r-a :
.
llme safe drivers. Compati·
II
Will
ed
add
goal rota ·
new live Pay &amp; Flexible Sehed- McCiure'a Raataurant now
P~ regul~y. Chock 11 ule. Apply In parson 420 VI· hlnng all 3 locations, full or
ou www.a-s P!"'rs·para- and Slreel Pl. Pl.
palHime, pick up applloa·
d•se.com
tlon at location &amp; bring back
DRIVER TRAINING
between
9:30am
&amp;

FT PT

I

:;.; :. ;_;:.;. ;.:;__.__
1

1 1 11 6 11

Fun Exerclae P[~te Le•
INSTRUCTOR
10:ooam. Monday thru Sat·
10111. Leam set ..,.,.ense ~~ National Organization need· urday.
your own pace. Jay Clarks. lng Instructor to wor1&lt; In the
l&lt;e'l"l Karate Sehll&lt;{ 740· Gallla/ Meigs County oroa Millie's Is now accepting ap142-2546

Mom, tired of the trash on
TV? Mako you' voice heard.
Go to o &gt;m·l oonmoms.com
• on lhe lnlorn ,I for more In·
• fo. Part~ipailon Ia free.
.
. Shop Online 0
·

•

·
'
,
•
1

,
•
1

,

,

'

r
r

GJV&amp;\WAY

1 Full·tlmo bebvsltter wanted
for 2 children (ages 5 a 10)
In my home, ahlft wortc,
Free Pupoles- Call before musl have rolloblo tranapor9pm. (740)446·1150 .
tatlon, (740,949 ,2455
AI.IC'nON AND
Gallipolis localed home
FLEA MARKEr
health agency seeking FT
-~-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiii·· offk:a assistant ~ng okMio
•.
required Accopllng appllcaRick Pearson Auction Com· tiona lor'
STNA. Apply In
pany, full Ume auctioneer, person at 3084 St Rt 150
complete auction service. Gallipolis
or
phon~
Licon~ t66,0hlo &amp; Wool (7401441 . 1393
Virginia, 304·n3·57S5 Or
·
304-'f73.5447.
GENERAL MILLS/
PIL'SBUAY
~
WANrED
Wollolon Ohio
TO fluy
STOREROOM CLERK
~
PDBmDN
'
Applicant wlflloaue and""
Absokita Top Dollar. U.S. eelve 811 parta Into 1M com·
Sliver, Gold Coins, ~roof· puttr ayatom, kaap the
aats, . · Diamonds, Gold porta catalog up to date,
Ringo,
U.S. Currency,- stock parto and do dally oyM. r.s. Coin Shop, 151 Sec· cle counts on Inventory
ondAvenuo,Galllpolia, 740· Items.
446·2842.
Applicant mual be a high
Wanted: Old Pinball Ma· school graduale or oqulva·
chines~ Juke Boxes and lent, have good math BkKis,
Other Coin Operated Equip. computer sidllo and porta
ment. Hunilngton. (304)429· oKparfenr:e doalrld. Good
.
communication akllla are a
3333
muai .. The pooltlon will re·
I \11'1 11 \\ 11 ' '
qulro tome heavy lifting,
weekend and ollornate ahlft
o..,t I ~ \ I~ I ..,
work may alto ba requlrecl·
rrjlij0F';;;,.;;;;,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;IovortJmo 11 poolllbla. w. oi·
. ~. WANrED
forcompaiHI\rowageo,eK·
l .•J:J....,..
• collent health core boneflta
hqllcflys, vacation, and '
40t (K) plan
~uR·TO START
If lntoraoted·, pO!alt Mnd
(upon complttlon of frelnlng rooume to:
Looking~"' 0 New JOI or Gtntrol Mlllll Pllllbury
OAIIIIR??? .
2403 S. PennsylVania Avo.
Than don't mlu thlo opporWlllat~, ~lo 4!892
tunltylll
Attention. HR Sloreroom
CALL: 1-188o97....,0111
!ED/ AA l!rnpiGYOf

I

r

·------,1

,

100 WOIIKEIIB NEEDED
AMomblt crafto, wood
llama. Material provided.
· To $480+ wk.
Free lnformillon pkg. 24 Hr.
1-801·428-4760

PT

WNk·

'I

PKo1 Ptog,wn, stnQte Paa
,.,., No Credlllllad' c-,
Alt..., _ _,..,.. · a n d - LOalto lui
II
Renttrw. Own Your Now
Home TOCIIyl (740)44ePall_,. All Ill 1111 3570.
·
- - ftllollf 10
_,..,
1 - 1 - - · Moble
. . . - - , - . , HOme many-· 2 Cat
3ongo.Onacnololln!lllo
, _ - · llffiiOn, 1011 ilpolll Fwry (304)078-11!37
-~~~--- tHS Clayton 14K70 IJoO.
orfttln, OtlftV - 1 0
2 full blllto -..,_...,
'
tlfr, r:.":lllx11-·
dfiOIIIttloiiiO•
po!Oh, Ill O bulfcllng.
(3041878-7116
1111o _..,.... . . 1111
tiM ·011y1on Moble HOme
futcMIO!tiiiY....
t4x70 2111. 1111. ""¥ aiding,
~ fw Nil
lhingll rool, 2 dlc*l, on .M
--1110
, . 1n ft·'llpollt Fo~
~.too (304'ie'f6.&amp;7114 .. ,

"'lltlo....,IOIIto-

--on

n.Toi\NnDDo
AIMakuoflJtwnMowtrl;
Small Englnee; Korootnt
Htatoro and Salamandtro
Repaired.
Call
Mlko
(740)448-7504
AD of your home llf)Oira; eel·
dHions &amp; remodeling. :!&lt;lhr
emergency 1t1Vict senior
cltlzo(n a d 1"!"'~~' 22yro.
exp. 304 o-.c:ygg

157

Goorgoo p - Sawmill,
don1 haul your loal to lito
mill just 0111304-815·11167.

":.ol:·--.
.!':;2"'

blth:"'iotol. ·-~8•

, thll:,..•~·~•,..

watch your child In my

Mt

_..,lly-

home. Patriot/ Rio Grande

nlllle II on M....,
.

Areo. (740)245o9025
Moving and Htullng: CIHn

riO
Call

I OR

..

-

APR. FO&lt; Lflllngl, flDD.318- referenceo,
no
33231Elct.1701.
(740)992.0185

~~..1. ~ wfDl
~· ...., __,_,., pluo
def&gt;C*It 741).8e2.0175

I

·u--Mu-..-

,...__._.,~

14x70. --..om, _.
lrlc ltoal, 11300 I month,
1150 · dtf)OIIt, no pols,
(140)742·2714
·

2 _ , mobile home for
tenl

sea8

no peta

'

(740)892·

I

uk for Cheryl.

2 bldraatn. Eleclria, 14xt0 I

1100

,

SALE

.

8mll TraJIIr Part!: f,2501deo'

FO&lt;- 1flx70, 3 bedroom, 110111 t350/Ront. 314 mila
2 .blth, 0111 74().3116-9821 Holur Hoopftof. (304)878-

lloMEs

~

I

r•a

regulatory complll!nco hlllory. lntereotecl candldatal
ahould apply to: ROCk·
apringo Rtheblllto)lon Contor, 36759 Rocklprlngo
Road, Pomeroy, Ohlo
45789 · Jackie Nowacma,
RN Director of Staft Oovtlo
740 ' 9112 o8608.
opmont.

~qual ~~~~'!:,~~~r

ncourag ng ·~· oe ll·
verally.
Tho Gallla eou- Soli and
Con
"''
Water
ltrvauon Dlotrfot
Is -ng on Admlnfltrotlve
Aoalalent. Thlo poolllon Ia
40 houra par week with ••·
colltnt bentflta. Application/
reoume will lle occoptecl
through •February 8, 2002.

ln~or:'ecl oppll\:~ oan

o • a copy o

....,.

gv An:;:nc&gt;o~nt anrt 1 ~ob

(7:)~ 73 ~ ,,:.,~

oHICIII1tf Jackoon
Plko, Sullo 1lilltl, Galllpolla,
OH 45831..
EOE
by the

r

~

~

bldfOom ln fthlonll

Ir .

prolC.

$39115.00 or LESS, all with
6 month 7-500 miles warran-

ty, 1983 Ranger, 1992
Ranger, 1"5 Nloaan truck,

auto &amp; ale, 19tM Grand AM,

11193 Gnmd AM, 1998 Cav·
Iller. 1998 Brseze, 93 CutlUI, 113 C.valler wagon. 96
Neon, 96 Baretta, B4 ,..,..
pfra, 91 C..YOIIer, all have .
been throuoh aervlce dept.,
Mark'o. Pomeroy, (740)992;!011
1987 Pontiac Bonneville
$600. OBO. Run• Great.

(304)e71H1988
1888 Seab 900 Hatchback,
4 eyl ., automatic, sunroof,
162,000 mllll. Rtrr)l Well,
$1000 080. (740)446-8813
1989 Chevrolet K1600,
4WC, 4.3 Engine, 4 opaed,
138,000 mlloa, $3500.
(740)446-0426 aftemoon;

Camero,

Engine, Rebuilt Transmit·

94 Ooo Trockor, 4114, 5opd,
A/C,· 48,000 mil.., ·New
Point. New Top. $3700.
(740)367-'1253
98 Chryetor Cfrrui LXI ,' CD
Pl1yer, Leather Interior,
176DD 080. 42,000 mllll.
1740)258-12112 or (740)258-'
i515
.

Bar Stooi

I

='$='. . .......,_

':ct.

0

·

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----..I. . .........

··· •· ·1.. --. ---·---...-.. ·--- · -· ·--·~ .•.----- -·
~

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afterabigwin.Tohim,ateam
always b e Ieve Ie d 10
. .
can
tts
next game.
,.,., ,
talk'
b
were not
mg a out.
winning the conference,''
O'Brien said. "We're not talk-

He said it would have
been easier not to trade
Alomar for outfielder Man

ing about anything but win-

fu ·

ning our next game on Saturday. We have always told the
players that if we concentrate
·
on d o10g
t h at, t h e rest will
take care of itself."
"It's great to be on top of
the Big Ten,'' Brown said.
"But now everyone is after
us."
After Saturday's game at
home against Northwestern,
the national perception of the
Buckeyes will be forged by a
four-game road swing against
Wisconsin, Michigan State,
Iowa and Indiana.
.. d
, h
,
I on t t ink were good
enough to look down the
road,'' he said . "Our philoso-

::1;,.r:a:;::;"•·- ·-

r

·

I

..,.,

'

.,
·1-

MAC
from .,__ Bl
..-. . .'llliii

-Ohio had one final chance
..,

"Robbie Alomar is going
to help us be a better ball
team this year by playing for
the New York Mets," Dolan·
5al'd .

Lawton and prospects , but it
wouldn't -have prepared the
team to compete in

approach to the Indians
new
philosophy.
That
includes a group of seasonticket holders he met with
·-w h o questtone
·
d D o 1ails
•

Bobcats (11-6, 6 - 3) .

27 points for the Zips and has
97 points in the last four

points and 10 rebounds for his
first careet double-double as

games.

Bowling Green beat Western

Keith

M cLeod

Uvoly'o iluto 8110.. 1992
Oldo Achllr'll, 11800. 11113
Plymouth . Aoololm, $1400.
1
' 11188 Ford Mustang, $1200.
1888 Ford F-1&amp;l ~lekup,
11200. '"2 Oodgo Ram
'' Von, 11000. 1985 Oodgo D·
250 P.lekup, 11000. 11190
. """' Tampo,. 2 Door, $8DD.
11188 Oltavy Baraftl. $800.
18fl Oklo CUtloaa Su·
~. seoo. 1866 Mazda
Pickup, 18110. 11190 Goo
Storm, Btlck, $800. 11185
Fcril E350 Von, 15 glt, seoo. 10 mott caro un·
ilor 11000. COil (740)388·
11303 .

Esterkamp missed a 3-point

and Hunter had 19 for the

lOg scorer with 23.5 points

..

-

··· ·· -

is not unrealistic because
past teams should have won

This was his seventh 30-point
game of the season .
Leon Rodgers scored I 0 of
his 31 points in overtime in
Northern

lllinois '

victory

over Toledo.

Public Notices in Newspapers.
'Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.

Suo Storta, and thll
Paggr Sue S1orto be
found to be tho
owner In IN all!lplo
abeolute ot the rul
eatete delcrlbed In
tho Complaint; or In
the event that the
Court ohould lind
thai tho Detondan1o'
title Ia superior to

Plolntlll'o, Plalntlll
requeo1a lhlo Court 1o
lind
that
lha
Colendanta havt
been
unjuallr
enriched and that
Plalntlll be entitled to
receive tho value of
thlo
unjuot
enrlchmanl. Plelntltl
further requeata thet

ATTENTION
Rt. 7 Pizza Express
has merged with

Racine Pizza Express.

forked Run
Sportsman Club

110 Help W111tad

GunSheot

, OPTdMETRIC
. .:'.· ASSISTANT

Fri., Feb. 1st, 20112,
7

Ealobl~tl'· b••)l'&lt;&gt;p10metrlot'o omee Ia lftkln1
1 nltolihi fuii·Ume Dll&lt;tor'rAsallflnL Du11es
· in&lt;ludol'~llent pre· lelllDI and hlltory laklna.·
·peUeot eyowear detlan and verlftcadon, end mile:.
ollke dudoa. Trolnlna will be provldtd. Haa.1)r,
dodlcotlop,lond at.tentlon to detollon requlnrl 1
MlniiiiUIWliOf 2 yean work expeitenc.e and /or I
year pool·hllh Hhool education are alto requlnrl.
Salory liaaecl on qlllllftcaUono. II you eo,Joy
workllla with new people, are apr to hi.m, ind
ore lntereatelllolona tenn IUU tlittt employmellt,pl- ~d a complete reoume lncludlna
Joblldtool ~ferert&lt;tl ind oalary requlremenl by
~bruacy 8. Abooluiely no pbona calla P'Doctor'• A11iltant
Joma L. Schmoll, O.D.
443 Gen. Hartlnaar Pkwy
•Middleport, OH 45760

----~-

.,J..

30

the bench to score 20 points

or Brian Ross

Nominations &amp; Election of
VIce President to take place

had

· to win, but the Bobcats' Steve

Between ,a a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

Meeting Monday Feb. 4th

Ramirez or Juan Gonzalez,
but
that long balls ·haven't
·
brought a championship to
Cleveland .
" We've had the home
runs and we haven't won.~·

per game, also had five assists.

Michigan.
McLeod, the MAC's lead-

Set-·Pat Hill

992-9200
949-4900

-

the theatrical value of a
home run from a Manny

even more games.
"We're building a team
·
d o f JUSt
·
·
mstea
co 11 ectmg
talent," Shapiro said.

was able to
percent of
holders to
another year.

No• Phone calls Please

For Delivery call

begin next week- because
f
k
nd
0 omy'
a wea
ec n
a
weakened power lineup:
He ., 1.d he understands

0

He said he
persuade 75
those t 1·cket
come back for

.Previous experience helpful
but not necessary.
We will train·the right person.
We seek aggressive, self-starting
professional salespeople with the
desire to earn well above average
income. We offer a·benefit package,
including 401 k, medical and
retirement benefits, a five day
work week and no Sundays.

Fri. &amp; Sat. 4 pm ·10 pm

year.
Dolan acknowledged th~t
he 1·5 concerned about 1·ndividual ticket sales _ which

Dolan said .
Shapiro said that past
Indians teams have been
talented, but underachieved
because they relied on
son1ebody h1'ttt'ng a three run home run to win . He
said another 90-win season

attempt at the buzzer.
Rashon Brown also scored

Sonny Johnson came off

24,000 to 25,000 of Jacobs
Field's 43,368 ·seals have
been sold in season-ticket
pack~ges, on par With last

goals and considered dropping their tickets.
"Th e questiOn
·
1 t h'm k
they were really asking: are
we going back 10 the '60s
an d t h e '70 s an d t h e '8"""•"
Dolan said referring to
1 1 d' b
1
C eve an s a ysma teams
from those decades. "I told
them' we're not."

'

We are continuing to deliver to
our valued customers in the
Pomeroy area. With an
expanded menu and fast,
courteous service . ·
Open 7 days a week
Sun·Thur 4 pm - 9 pm

the

ture.
He said most fans he's
talked to this winter have
taken a "wait-and-see"

s speed,

olon, Ntw Tlroo, $1700.
(740)388o8128
91 Plymouth Acclolm, 4
Door, 58,000 mllll, S1800
OBD, (740)4411-8044 .

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

r

ve,

14800. 1997 Chevy cava·
Hor, Black, Ground E"acta.
601(, 5 opaed, 4 eyl. $6495.
11197 Chevy Caviller, Auto• mat~. 4 cyf, $3800. 11192
Pontiac Flroblrd, T-Topo,
VB, Auto., $3200. KC Auto
Salol.
1740)448-8172,
(740)892·9401.
2000 Sllvor Dlidgl Noon,
~flo, Lalded, 34,000
mlln.
$6000
OBO.
(740)258-1233
89 CamillO RS, T·topo, 305

I

C'

frequently slighted in the
polls and in the media. He is
sparse with his pnise for his
· d se ld om exu Its
p Iayers an

......

- 1998 Chevy Monte Cario,
• 83K, $5900. 1995 PonUac
l'lroblrtl, Black, V8, 5 opaed,
90K, $5900. 11195 Chevy

11to111o"".,.. ' -

ri6

0 Brien is one of the big
reasons why Ohio State is so

Indians spokesman Bob
DiBiasio said they've lost
some season-ticket holders
and gained some, but that

fnMn ...._ Bl

11112 Ford T·Bird 92.000
mllll, In good cond. uklng
$2500.prlce neg. 304-6757273
1994 Plymouth Sunrlonce,
$550. Runs Gocct, Good
School Car. (740)44e-0894

.-o.ooo

WNk
.
2
':M

Left.

' r•a .!~

I

*

Bares

29

s·

j

80

,

DUE TO OUR CONTINUED
GROWTH, TuRNPIKE
OF GALLIPOLIS IS
LOOKING
SALES PEOPLE.
·..:··· ...,. :..........
,.,,,.,~

Offkl~. Many MINTS AT IUDGET PfU..
and lntemet, exoetlent Con·
Grog Cll AT ~ACKION 18- Hklo-o-bed for lilt, burnt dillon. H&amp;~ printar, Very

":J:.v1'""
!

Rogero wa~lng.

loader, Sspd, Loaded, Dartt Tint, Wiring, new service or re--

(740)245·9460

.r.'o0o.

r'o

Allied

In Bam, Never Wet. 900 lb.
1!0108, $16.00 por bole. Ap-

II Smith .._ Pon- TATI1,52·Dffva orange, $115, (740)982·1552 Nice. Bolh $100 flrm. Eloc·
tloc or phoria (740)448- trom $297 to f383· Walk to ofter Spm.
trfc Typewriter· uold tx,
2282
shop &amp; movlft. Coli 74().
Uke Now, S65 finn. ~448·26e8. Equol Houstng Hldalled, $125. Lavaltat, Col)(740)448-3235
l..alll;
Oppollunlty.
1-l:,:_g~~lllr, 175. ~ooV ~ond Pump 175
AWOB 1 Chrilty'l Family · LIVIng,
OBO, IHk noeda N,.ir W
~
.- - - '
:11140 Now Uma Rd., Rut· Late Model Whlrtpool Wash- u~ng IO&lt; Pool Brand: Amerf.
55
o1 fltmlind 1/lln lend, Ohio, 74().742·7403. erl Dryer, $160 for MI. GE con ~roduata. (740)943~. - 111 in puo Aporllnonl, liomO and.tralar Wallhtr, $76. Almond Whlrt· 1026
wolf lllclrfo,
Nntlfo. Commorol" .,0 , . pool Self Dlfroatlng Refrig- ,-,-.- - - - - - ~~· ~llblt: on Yo;: fronft aYOIIIbto ID&lt; 1-. O&lt;ator, S75. Tappan Dryer, Prom d - . t lavtrldor,
A •
,...__
-~ VlcanciH - ·
SSO. Call after Spm. ol%t 14, 1 red btodld, lllzo
Olv, ....,,,.101', "'""'
(740)448-IIOSe
lg.. S125 each, (304)882·
U,OOO.OO 111 ilate, H2· Clean 2br WID Hookup
3354
1N144
lltfoi'IIICI ·and Dopoolt. Nci Mollohan. Carpoi, 202 Clark :::-="':--:--:-:--:--f'oll.(304)e78-IS1112
Cltopai 'ROid, Porttr, Ohio. AlllrlonlllllfoiM·Dwntro
60 AOIN Handi!.- ' on
(740)446·7444 1·Bn·830· Tappan HI offlaloncy 90 plua
Now P111r Line II 1 - Qraaloua llvlita. 1 and 2 8182. Free Estlmatoa, Eaoy gaa fumacoo Including oil
tlon wtth al1r wtfl!.
bedroom opo11men11 11 v;~ ft11111Cing 80 dayo urnt u and
eltctrlc gu furna·
(304)837·2111 (304~1145- logo Manor lnd ·Rivlrlfrlo cosh. Vl'o.J Maotar CIU&lt;I. ctl. HI Efflcllncy Heat
Ml1
Apaltlttllnto In Middleport. Orfvt. a- llttlo oavo olot.
~umR•· ltoturing Tappone
Lol for- 111 ..,.~ From t276-t348. Coli )4().
Froe lnarecllblo warranty
oft Oalttl All.lrl!nl
eta•l5084. Equol . Hauling Saall. Ktnmore waar:r, 3 r.ckafl:.n.
·
11on1 oil1 .,...71io
m:,)2:e~ New, 150. c:~INa'' 7~AnNG •
11• Opponunltlta.
05311.
,
tor 8 pm.
. ot toSOIH72f_,.J:41-M15
1 Bedroom Apll1·
3 Bedroom on Route 2, ~~::::-:.. : Lol for 1111: Cfonoj, ..,. mont. (140)448 0380
Vary ~Ice Ouoon S1zo Bed· www.orvb.oontllionMtt
(304"'7flo5332
'
.~
prox.lfll-. __,All
room Suit• Bed, 2 Night
12,x1.,
,.
•
on. Wltor'&amp;
llpeclouo, 2 IIR, 1 Stondo Or-r with mlrro'
IALEIIALIIIALII
3 Bedroom. 2 llalh, S11 up 141500. (740--1
P0&lt;W ·
tte;;"l~ lla1h, Attached Garage, ohoot of drawora, mattroa: Gll Cook etovo, Rofrigera·
on Privata Property. Take 1880 HKiorelt Condfo ~.e-14 D&lt; (740,...... MODI monthR • Dopoolt/ Rof· 11 Included. Great buyl All · tO&lt;, lira placo, wall hooter,
I1V1II' paymonta. (740)448- tlon 2 BA Q.. Fumuo ~
tlpm
......,. oqufrecl. (140)448- for $400. Call (740)368. wofnger washer. Mllctlla,..
31113,
Control AC 1 owntr'
'
te01
8470
oua mercltandllt now and ·
· used. Flbruary 1 and 2, 4
'
Nlot 2 bedi
••••
171100 , (140)21.1g14
1
3br. 1111. Cobin In Country
oom .,... ·"""
and&amp;. fi:DDom to 6:00pm
10mln
to
Polrlt t987 Cfa~on, 14d0, 1 112
for rent, 1300/monlh,
ANriQvEs
dall . 553 Jackson ~Ike,
PlooHnt/Galllpollo. Living lllth, Gal Heat, CIA, Coli
. .dopoolt, Mlddltpo~. ~
Galrltlafla, OH (740)448Room w/FP,~
. Upotalro Mollollon Cerpot, (740)448~
1740o58Hl84tl, 740.6986308. BUilding Out 8ock.
Bedroom a
Ovtfo 7444 or (740)3117·7117
.
.
34M
Buy or uK. Rlvtirine Anti·
loOkinG Pond.
go·
RINi
quao, 1124 Eaat Main on Sliding glue door &amp; ocraen.
rwgo f 112 M/1.. Mew· 1D9D Fltotl!ocd I bed•oo.n
~ apartmont, SA 124 E. ~roy. 740o .$20. Altortecl lhltll of dry·
lng Mull floll. ll3,too 080 homa...ll ~I
740- 1 IIHroom UIIOI• montlt U25 unfumlohed, 1250 fur· "2·2526. Ru~ Moore, wall (1111). (304)675·1~
(304)578•2848
gee-.,:inllbllh ~~~ tliuo -.It Ploltt- nlllhld, 11300 dtpolllt, water. DWntr.
Traeclmltt $85 Roll IWI
mull ltlloCIII M.. e 740o l!oqufrod. atO..., .._.... -~~· (1M~)~· Sut'o Sal-bl• on tho.,.. bed S1tS
s16
Pll1lolly Ramodlled homl, 3111iollol34
lor NO ~:Jill ·Qo~o
•
• I Mlddl...., Colle I
(7..0)44t-07DII
'
'
Bedroom, 1 81th, Full
·
...;... c7
·•
·
n
.,......
• g •aa· :;._;;;:.;,;.;..;:::.:::..__ __
- · L.a~g~ una-. Now 14x70 3 bti2DII Only ....Ta
wore, Afoddln mantoil, and
VERA BRADLEY
11
740
eel 2 car gerago. 127 l(lneo 1875 d0wr1, 1118.54 por 1br. HOiiH · tt~. llt;~to ~:nho~:clo~:"":i more. ( )982 -0298
Now Spring Collooilon of
on Or., HO,OOO. (740)441· tf!Or1th. Coli Nljrlrl, .74().- ~~-- ~ Depaalt ... 110d..ima.1 Flooro. CA. ~
MI...OCTJtANI!OUi FabriCo.
Oo455
7171.
•
""""· No~-~~· ,II lath, Ful~ C.~p~tecl,
MERaiANoL&lt;ii;:
Downtown Merit Norman,
OM OfttJI
ltr ~. ,....., (304)77a. Adult Poollllaill' POol, Pa·
.
1030 4th Avenue
Cltan 2 bedraom houll In IJied doublo\ ldi.
81H
, .
.
llo, . .ft ~- No Pata,
. (NIII1 to Cornolot Tltoator),
Pomoooy, Will 1111 "' ien1 ~- 3 t 3
'ilo!M Mit . . 1.ouo PluolloiMtty ~It Bulk Watar Tank, _1,060
ljuntlngton, WV.
wfDl option to bu)l on land IJoth gaa ttiat, .::"ilt .,:'
~ Required, Oaya: '140-440· Ollior;&gt;, ~ 75. WOod ~~(304)1S2:i·3g11
oontroot, (140)511o7144
fl--'1
with
.,_'
'
.
' ,._,;::::; 1481· 1!vtttlngo· 740-3S7· lng. 8x12 Bam Typt, ~.
jH'7
goa, ,..., =~~~j,
01011: 740 HO oio1.,
(740)21511·9221
Wotorilnt Spoolol: 314 20D
FD&lt; oa1t 1ty owner. - ltfo •riot for~
, . 1101 ptll,
PSI S21.00 Par 100; t' 20D
home on 1 lOti , _ :,.. ,_:..74Q.Itt
ljiWij!m.
'~~ott
-Towttl
~·
Grubb'o
PlanoTuning
&amp;
PSI
$35.00 Per 100; All
1
~- ThiN bedraom, JISOIIUI,,._,Oft . 31, _ lbllli-ln lngoppfloollonlnowfor ~=· 0Probrl:"~~ ~-Comprooalon Flttlngl
two bltlto, .....,.r ge-. 4Q.882 1tn
lloolnt ~ llf!l1a • Ill
·
1 iii'
family 100m with ftroplooo, 7
'
·
· 110 lnllria
MlirOI\1, 2DI)J
· 740"'*41125
RON IV,lNI ENTifll'fllll.
7
MAnroom.Nowoontreli1011- Only N50 down and 401aorr::':':':a:- "'~ 1br. Hucl~lrld· IAI· for · 1 ndoponrtont "Hitbllfl Oil- Q Jooliacn, Ohio,' 1.-800lng 1 11o oyatom. One mlo 1111.311 por month 11110 you
·
-.tt and dlubled EOH 1rlbuloo, c.a For Ptoduot Or ::53:;7...:·8::112::8:._--,--nuto Off Aoula 7, but It~ prt- a . now home. calf 1.JOO. 3br. In· Cflt16n, No
(304)e71H1878
OpportunlfY. (740)4o\1-1982 WhHI Choir foi aala. AlVIII. (140)1111io3fll1
5374231111fr loiMIIui.
' Smoking. No Pata.
moot Now. (304)076-7791
Mcinth + blf)OIIt
Very Nco, 2·3 bedroom
JET
FO&lt; llllolg. Aanch' Homo, Spoolll F.lrtlnof~ ' COWl) (304)773oNe1
·'
'=:-n1, In town, lltgo
AERATION MOTORS
1'/hHo,GEAutomatloWaaholbr., 3ba., with -ned In· Poytnllltl .. lOW 11 1'11.
,
· k
. Lll, 11500/mo, Rof· Aopolrecl, Now &amp; RobuiH In lng Machine, Heavy Duty,
poliO f)OIO!&gt;, 2 011~~~~~~· Proquollly .. by • phoM. Pilot PI'OGf!Ti Re~tort - I '*&gt;0111 required. Stock. C.H Ron Evlino, 1- 2yrw. old. $200. {304)~·
171,000. (304)727"1"11·
(740)441o3170.,
NHclad, 304-1ltll-~.
(740)441·3844
IIOQ.637·111128.
.
3334

r

3447 or 740o985-4306

Hoy ID&lt; saO!, $1 a beki, call
(740)992·2070

3
Sotvic&amp;s · . Mldci''-', Colt
Tom Ander• ~111111.

..., altar 5pfn (740)8U·
LDANI, LOANI, LOANI, 3348.
'
for good "'bed crd coli
tollfroo1·888-884-S7M .
Moliulbuls
~·No up tront lilt
FOR 8.uJ:
,
:::Faatllllobll~PICIII wlleomo f2ll50 Nl"' !&lt;-, llolli,
Co
CIA, · 11.a
TURNED DOWN ON
~~h.
(?40)441 ,
SOCIAL IIICUIIITV /Ill?
No FH u..-. we Wl~l 11388
f.888·582-334a
_.._
12X60 Mobllt ,..,,~, 8P'
prox. tO lOIII land, lltfY
IICfurted, by owner. 740o
lloMa
it2·311311
14•60 lllll/llrlng a.a
FOR SALE
walla., 14tr10 olljlllkllnt
1 Aero, r1vor Irani, Br1c1c1 &gt;1· 2&gt;0 walla :lbr. 2111., l-Ito
nyl, 3 BA, 2 Bath, 2 Flropla- - ~:..
~
- · Hlll&lt;lwood flooro, Ap~
prox 2,000 oq ft. Full 11aao- =~?t4ti'"O;
mem. 11so,ooo. (740)448- (!CII)4;41881 - .5

antoa.
rafer&amp;r1COillur·
nloltod.Local
Eatabllahed
1975.
Coli 24 Hra. (740) 4460870,
t-800 ·287.0578 ·

Troy BIH tilflr horse aloe.
start, good cond. seoo. 3()4.
675-3824

·haute 1o rent, prefer countrv dition, MIH11t1811 InclUded,
letttng, need to move in by S150. (740)387·7152, leave

rio

u~=~guer·

.:,(7_40.:..)3_7_11-_938_1_ _ _ _ B.F.G 31~10.5, 35,000 pairs. Master Licensed aloe·
Ford 800 tractor one owner, ml\ta, Remanufactured 11- triclan. Ridenour Eloctrlcal,
real ~$3800 ..
ue, $11,000. (740)44Hl385 WV000306. 304-875-1788.

·-•

.'

I

590

I

Remodeled

Top to Bottom Cleaning
SaMet. PfofeUionol ciHr&gt;
lng ot aHordable priaM.
R-Ial, ofllct, rernodofo
lng and construction c:1oan
up. Confidentlll. 1112o29711
or 992·13flt.
·

BASEMENT

91 GMC Jimmy, 4x4, Good
Eu:cnucAiJ
~ (740)448-8044
Condlllon, $2800 . 080,. ,Lwooii~iiiiiiiii-iil:noNiiiir·
Ford 50DD Gas TractO&lt; wnh 99 S-10, 4x4, Red, V·6, Residential or commercial

pets, Paid $150· worn once aa a
Brldumald dreu, Size
18120, 1111 for $t 00. Shoes
Now Taking Appllcatlono- to matcl&gt; size g 112, $2() . .
35 Weot 2 Bedroom Town- (740)448-7553 "'1740)448hO\JitApartrnento,lncludeo
94
Water
Sewage, Trash. _3_1_._ _ _ _ __
$35Mo1o., 740-448-0008.
4 Naocar llcketa for the
0no Bedroom Apt. v.na St. VA5DD. Martlnovflle, VA.
Galllpollo, OH (140)367· Aprtl18. (740)258-1304
7888
.
Amulng
Molobollom
WANTED TO RENT
BrNidhrouglt.ll
·
·
Now Publlahor for the Ohio Lose t 0 pounds- 200
Valfly Publishing Company poundo eaoy, qulek, Fall
furnished oportment DNara matic . RRosuno. _:~Jo
1ura'1 0 r. ecommauu......
10 rent for 3-&lt;4 months.
Should have """ate bath· 'Ask about FREE Semple'
room and be c~ to Gatllp. (740)4o\1·1982
oils. Coli Den Dlekerson at '---'-"--.;..;..;_ _ __
(740"..·2342 (da•o)
Baby Bad with Mottrooa,
.' ·
$26 Finn. TodCiar car Seat.
W.oom
$20Finn. (304)895-3739
TOn-ftl:.rf •
Bunkbeda. Red Tubular
Style. Full Size Bottom,
Looking for 3·4 bedroom lWin Slzo Top. Great Con-

r-

250, conversion, (740)985-

~

a

Great start ratM, excellent

leal Plaza, B36 Sl Rt 180
Galli lis OH
po ' '
Need FuH llme Retaii.Htrdware Clark, Sand Rosume
to: CLA 550, c/o Golllpollt
Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Ave, GaiKpolls, OH ••••1.

Etc. Odd Jobl.
(740)448-7504

I \ H \ I " ' 1'1 'I II "
,\ I I\ I \ I I H h.

1 ..J'IIedrooml FOI'ICioud North 3n1 Avenue, Middle- **** Prom Dreaa **••
From t1-., 4% port 1 a 2 bedroom furnish· ·"Mori-LH'. Coior-Aubeflllno
Down, 30 VHro at 8.6% eel lpenmento, deposit
(Light Smokey Lavender),

.
2 -..om, for 11ft or rwnt,
1518.K70 FIMivoOOd and lot. quf4!t oonvnunlty. nlcl claan
Roof
OH 3 2 ttonit, (740)1112·2187

lnloo-lltllllf
"' &amp;41-.lndln

Mother of 3 would Hko lo

r

It ~ I ~ I

,::::;,

2 r:· I OR

,..__,-or

'

Now Hiring, Eaat o1 Chicago
PIZZI Company, Apply It
llt.tsiPnl
1640 Eaatem Ave, QallpoOPPoRnJNrry
lla. ·
·
OV&lt;Irbrook Center 11 cur·
· INDTICEI
rent~ accepting apollcatlons OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHfor its upcoming S1NAclaoa lNG CO. rocommonda 11111
whleh Will begin on Fobfu. ·youdobu~naUwfD&gt;pooplo
ary 6. 2002. Appllcatlona you know and NOT to otnd
Will be accepted until Fobru- money th;..q, tho mall until
ory 4, 2002. For any queo- you have ln-tlgatecl the
tiona, pleaoe contact Knlllt. oHorlng
Madden 11 (740) 1112-6472
·
·
· Ston Your Buolnooo loPart·tlme RN and ful~time
and ~rt-timo LPN 1- tOO day... Pnme Shopping Cor&gt;
bed ~ -• 1-~1, -E---• tor Spoco AYOIIable At Af·
..,~no -· . - : fordable Rato. Spring Valli)'
lent OPl&gt;OrtUnlty or Chol ~lllzl C 1174Q.ol.4e.OfOI
longing and rewarding ox• a
·
poriance. Sign on bonua.

onclf. Apply In pO..on, M*

r•.

••

t'

6

blocker, Dials a muscular big
mal' \ with .good hands and
Dudl""·
is a rruxture of both..
~·1
"I m not surprised by their
record at all;' Self said. "I
don"'1
"' know anybody, who
predicted them to be 16-3 at
this stage, but as far as their

Tribe

faru so much as how O'Brien
has his team pbying.
"It's !lot the place, it's the
playen,': he soid.

success in the league, that
doesn't surprise me at all."
C&amp;C General Home Malnle·
Obviously, Value City Arena
:"'"""' Pll\!ng.~~ ~~
is ·a · tough place to play. But phy has always been the most
_.:• and s;.,..e. For free Self said what makes 'it tough ' important
game is the next
.,
:;._;::..:..:.:....:=---eotlmsleOIIIChet, 740-992· ·1sfi'Hhe atmosphere and rabid one.
89 Oodgo van, 314 ton, D· 6323.
·
.• "'

~ -

IRS llpeclall We'll rnottlll 2111. FD&lt; rent In New Hoven Mat. I st. 740os90o0Di3
_m_e_os-'age,_.- - - - ll:l[lf40'=-=::o:: (304~·1107
Disney A.rea. 7 [lays, 8
tllfl
llllutllul R'- V11w ldlll
Night Hotel Stoy. Paid seoD,
FS: Brlrid New HOme 1800
'
For 1 Or 2 Poopfl, - ~ ·s 094
n for $199. (6.14)898·
1!&lt;1 It, 1 f/2 •0&lt;1 lot, Umllecl Or No Credll? Qov. - . DIQOIIt, No Poll, Foo·
HOUiEHOIJ)
$115,000. Coli for lltfo. ommtnt 11an1c . , _ Oltfll ttr Troller Pork, 740-441 ·
GooDs
~-45141 (740)448- At ~ In larbou,.. 0181 .
.
,
Frae Gas Fumaceo and Air
.
- · WV304-73W401.
~
BR
..
~Appllanceo:
Rocondftfoned
(Co
3
740nd)~•~'",:aooc.~
~
w
,.,.._
~~ FOI' 8111 In Hlrtlord Muot eaf~ 14170 11'1011111
Country, lohero, ~,...ro, Rangel, 29HXl98. If you don't can
wv. 3br.lfvlng raom, l&lt;f1oho home,
coli 740.311io24J4
Rofrlgrwtoro, Up To 80 Coyo us we both -1
for I!..........
Guar~ntHdl We Sill New
on, both, 1 cor gorego. -~·
·~
......
F
(304)882·118M
· __.
-ytog """'18nota, rench Full Size Mattrooa and Box
Mull eaf~ 1vv7, 11•11(1,
' City Maytog, 740-448-n95. Springs, $95. Oullting
NIOI Lot Mth 3 8ldroom front kltchtn, ewclf!lnt oonFrames, $25. Flberglau
houll wfD&gt;In Cl1y l,lmiL 0111 dillon; Coli Korona, 740·
IBM Thlnkpld Lab-top PC. Truck Topper, 91' long x
(740)21511-eoDII, (740)1118- 315"41
· 1 and 2 bedroom aport· P 1M with !'OM· Great for 60" wide, $60. (740)256·
IIOO!i.
mente tumlohed and unfur- E•mlll, $276. (740)4&lt;48· 1629
Wo ltovo opproxlmaloly 1!0 nlaltod, ooourfty diQOIIt "" 003flaftor 4pm
·
=::_____...,._.818 Main Streot, Pt. Pl.
homaa for under qulred no pall 74().992
Corntlfollfvulllloftlllailllt~:..2
0111~-323e aa18 '
·
'
. For Salo: Aocondlilonecl NEW AND USED BTEEL
IIOiy: 22 Fl tit • _,.
.
-..... diyera and ntfrlg-. Steel llaamo, Pipe Rebar
rooms. Large Kltolton,
1 Bedroom, All Utilities. oratoro. Thompsons AWII· FD&lt; Concrate, Angle, yhon·
Largo utility - . . . Lllf DR/
1375
plua
dlf)OIH. anco. 3407 Jaokoon Avo· nal, Flat Bar, Stool Grating
Fomlly Rm. Now Corpot
(740)145·5100 .
nut, (304)871&gt;-7388.
For Dralna, Drivowaya &amp;
thro~ut. FIA &amp; .AIC,
walkwayo. L&amp;L Scrap Mat·
178\...0. 1740)440o(1~ : FO&lt; Louo· 3000 to 8000 _ tbr. fumlohed, Nawfr Ro· Good UIOd Appilancee, R• ala Open Monday, T.-day,
1740)-.--2aoa 0&lt; r40~ 4
·
~ rnodofld. No Pata. Dopoolt, conditioned and Guaran· Wldnasday a Frldoy, 11om·
2883.
· ft3112- 2nd Avo.
on Ae1llf ~- llofo-ncoo
t-~ w11 h
o
4·30pm Cio--" Th -•"-!• ~~;;7 • __70 R-ulred.
(~
~.
ero, · ryero, ·
-a u.-y.
1.og - · Cablnl 1001111, Wallro 111 Vlul. Can _,. ~·· 0&lt; 304)074- Rangee, and Rofrigeratora, Saturday
Sunday.
to CIJitoml. Fill lnforml· Aontodol for P'III'Atll Anti- 141lftlr &lt;lpm.
SOme atart at $96. Skaggo (740)448--7300
tlon 740o&amp;ISI R:IU
- - - ,_..
~ .
.
Appllenaea, 78 VIne St.,
-~
quo ........ .__..... noo IIAunPUL
APART· (740)448-7398
~hllllpo Web TV· Gel E·mall

waltrauea.
MLT WMI&lt;dayo No

Hair Styllott
Fleola Salona, a loading
prollidor of hair and Ianning Tho Molge Soli and Wator
serv~ea, Ia ctltbraflng lt'a Conltrvatlort District naa 1
Grand Opening oa~y Flbru· futl-time opening ID&lt; 1111 poaryl H you ore a highly crea· oltlon of District Toohnlcfllt.
'
Uvo styllat looking for a fresh Some af the octlvltloo InFull time Wallreas Needed. atort, we havo poslilooo elude: . aurvey, rloolgn, draft·
Apply In Parson. Holiday avallablo for management lng, layouf and ohocklng
lnn· Gaihpollo.
and full time and port limo · cortllructlon .of orolllon conAn olcohol and othor drug StyMatal we offer 1 $300. trol proctlr:oa end moving
counltllng/
prevention hlnng bonuo, hourly and ualstlng With conaervo·
· agency located In Gallla end up lo 50% commlulon, tlor) tillage oqulpmont and
1 Jac-. Counllal, 11 - · 401(K) , prollt wring, ,a. program. OogrH of work·
' lng an ambltio~o Individual catk&gt;n, health, vision, dontol lng k~go In onglnee~
• ·to Hll tho following pooHiono: and IHo lno.. free adVanced ln1, ogrlcul1uro 1•~~-=
ra rnourc11 I "'"'" •
1 ProvonUon ! d - - Thil edUCAtion, lnd dlocauntal
paroon Will work With oN ogo Coli Mymo e 800o826· Forty hounl por
Coli
groupo in bOth cornmunltlll 8363• 3010 to ochedulo an for application and pooftlort
0
RllpOnllblllfllllncfurlo: C.: lntorvlowl
~=~0
ordination of Orug FrH Help wonted oanng for the ~lcotlonl io 4'30 : :
Community
COalition, elderly, Oorot Group Homo, Thurlday, Fel&gt;ruOry
'w.
Awarontlt llctfvltloo, Edu· now poylng mlr;mum wage, ,_rvo the rfght to -dvoro
cation Progromo, TralniiiQ now lltlfta: 71n&gt;3pm, 71,.,. tlN.
Program a, and Dovelop- 6pm 3prlt-1 1pm 11 pm·
ment ~ lmpl.....,totlon ol 7am: Clll. 7~882-5023.
UAGENTI.Y
NEEDED·
,_ ,..nt proloct. A mini·
plurna donoro Hm 160 to
mum af I Bacltolorl Coglll NUAIING IUPIIMIOIII $80 per wuk' ID&lt; 2 or 3
wl1h knowltdge of lfeohol, SCinlo HHio Nurllng Clntor houro wukly. Colli Sari·
tobocqo and olher drugo. 11 R• Struotu~ng for opU· TIC, 740o5112.ee51.
Sand resume by February mal AN Supervisor Cover·
8, 2002 to: FACTS, 45, Olive age.
wanteo seamotr.... FD&lt; lflo
St, Gatllpoilo, Ohio 45631 or Wt are loof&lt;lng lor dedlcat- dustrldl machine. 5 pold
Fu: (740)44e-80t4. EOE. eel, aeptndobla, caring holldayo, 1 - k vaclllon,
MIFIH.
RN'o for the 3of1 and 11·7 group lnouranco aYOIIablo.
shift. Now Wage and llanto Stelling · pay • IUO/hr.
, Attention!
r.m ~. I - without fit P,!t~kogo. PIIIH Coli (740)388-9310
~ ••N ·-·Pom'Caldwofl ot (740)44e·
2ndlob.upto
7150formorwlnformatlon. ·
125.·115./ltr. P1·Ft.
1-80e-218-7543
Nlld 6 ladfn lo Hll A110n.
www.Monoy·Croame.corn (740)41&amp;-3368
\

1

~

Moll To : Ohio Volley Publishing, $25 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

G:t=

I

to teach Driver Education. plication&amp; and resumes .for Out BullcfiOga. Buamenta,
Flexible houra Including gr111 COOle, prep cook, and Qaragel, Estalel, Tralh,

evenings and woekends.
Prior teaching IKponenca
preferre&lt;l, but not required.
Will train. Muat have good
driving racord and no criml·
nol history. Submll resume
www.ma')'kay.comltnpo~~&lt;:ar&lt;7. Wlih cover letter to: CLA
Your Mary Kay Independent 551, c/o Galllpolla Cally
' Beauty COnsultant, Bridget Tribune,
Gallipolis, OH
' Sponeor.
•5631 or fu to (740)351.
. 0537.

,

==

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Help wanled ·
O.lllpolll C.....
Sell. Shlriey Spears, 304· Security Gualds· Tempoq· (C.IHrl ClaM To Homo)
875·1429:
ry HOUnty gulll&lt;lo for up to ClffTodayl7-7,
4 months. Must be able to
1-800-214-o452,
Bebyslttor· Responsible work any shill lnoludlng
R f80o05·12748.
Toonager or Adult to watch moat Wlltlkonde. Muat hovo
nr

Moon

i

41

997

•

Col....

~

20 Words 7 Days • .Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
~ No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

All DIUII)' : 12 NOon 2
8ustne11 Dl'll Prior To
In Next Day's Paper
Publlcltlon
Sundoy In-Column: 1:00 p.m. SundiV DitPIIy: 1:00 p.tn,
For Sund1y1 Piper
Thur1d1y for S\lndiYI

6

HFJPWANIID

Pomoronllina AKC Regis- 1997 Oodgo Caravan 8 cyl.,
:=,.~~~=-= ~C. SF550D. (304)456-2S6a
All hove · (304)773- age. . Black,
ord Ft50
XI.T pac':·
5052
4x4, llnled
win·
:-:-:-:----:--:-:-'- dows, AM/FM radio cos·
Wolmaroner Pllf)l, 4 Bkll. 3 sotto. Crufle Control. FactoSliver, Ful Bloorfed, No Pa- ry lift kit, AJC. 4.2 1nor V-6,
~ : pero, S150 each. (740)2511- 5apoed•. St0,500. (304)458•
• 11221
2588
Weimaraner ~upa AKC 2001 Ford E•plorar Sport
Shota, Vet Checked, 8 Trac, Excellent Condition,
' .. weeks, Champ Bloodtlna, Low Mileage, 3000. Fully
;
S40D. (740)682-8081
Equipped, $2&amp;,500 Phone
(740)4olt-t309

• Start Your Ads With A l&lt;eyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlltions
• Jnctude Phon• Numblr And Addrell Whtn Nttded
• Ads Should Run 7 Clyl

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

~ r•a

.."'•..
..••

Prlvote Porty Ads Under $100

~

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-l'rlday for lnsertlon

The Dally Sentinel• P8S14t 8 5

~ ~~~;;~~==IIOR,~~&amp;u~==~r~~~~:;,-_~--~,--~~~-~~~~~~--------------------~~~~~~~~~

'Ql:rtbunt- Sentinel - 1\.e

.'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

·;

•

'.
I

Help Wanted

NOW
HIRING
$6·$8 '

Per Hour
FuriiPart TJn\e
OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT

1-888·974-JOBS

..
•

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIQS COUNTY,
OHIO
PEQQY SUE STORTS
PLAINTIFF

.Ya·

H. D. HIVELY, ET AL;
DEFENDANTS

CASE NO.
01.CV·17t
NOTICEIIV
PUILICAl)ON
To: THE "'NKNDWN
HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN,
DI!VISI!ES,
ADMIIIITRATORB,
IXECUTORS,.
IPOUSE8,
SUCC!SSORS AND
AIIIQNI OF DAVIS
QIDRAL,
DECEASED,

olto be granted coato
and all other reltol,
either In raw or
equity, which lhltl be
proper.
The real e1t1te 11
doacrlbtd In deed
recorded In Volume
91, Page 371, of the
Olllclel Recorda ol
1ht Recorder ol
Molgo County, Ohio,
being 2.832 ecreo
located In Sec. 24, T
7, R. U, Scipio
Township,
end
aaolg ned Audltor'o
Parcel No. .17·
00355.004.
You are required to
answer
the
Complain! within
twonty·alghl (28)
dar• oftar tho loot
publlca,lon of thla
Notice, which will be
publlohed once eoch
weak lor · olx (8~
auecoaalva - · The
loot
publlcotlon will ba
made on tha 2 1 at
dar of February,
2002, end tho twontr·
elghl (28) dora lor
enawer
will
commence on thai
date. in tho caoo ol
rour failure to
onower or othtrwlao
rotpond
11
raquu,od br tho
' Ohio Auloa ·of· Civil
Procedure, judgment
by default will bt
l'ltndored ogolnat you
and lor 1he rollol
dam·a nded In lhl
Complaint.
Doted thla 3rd dor
ol JanU.ry, 2002.
M·a rlene Harrleon,
Clerk ol CouFII

31,2002
l2),) 7,17.,4,24,21,2002
8t

Aclclret- Unknown:

JEFF ·QEDRAL ,
AddreiO Unknown;

'·

�•

•

•
•

~P!!ege!:~B~6!_•~TM~~!!,;Se~nt~lne!!!.!,I_ _ _ _ _ _ _~----!P~omeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thuradiy, Jan. 31,.2002-

':

·oklahoma gets defensive, wins
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The scoreboard looked a lot different
' 'co Oklahoma than it did a few days ago.
, : The sixth-ranked Soone" were on the
: 1..-inning end of a 58-53 score with No.
!
9 Oklahoma State on
Wednesday
night.
Four days earlier,
Texas Tech by itself
· 1cored 19 points less than both teams
. combined in ·routing Oklahoma.
· "I thought our kids played tremendous defense," Oklahoma coach Kelvin
Sampson said after the Sooners' 18th
straight hom~ victory. "We faced adversity in the second half, but we bounced
back to hold on."
• Oklahoma (16- 3, 5-2 Big 12) led by
16 points in the first half, but the Cowboys (17-4, 4-4) regrouped and went
. ahead 49-48 before ·Hollis Price arid
Aaron McGhee took over for the Soon-

NCAA

from Page Bl

}

Brady had vaulted over Michael Bishop
•nd Damon Huard to be Bledsoe's primary backup.
; When Bledsoe was injured in Week 2
- keeping him in the hospital for several days and out of practice for seven
weeks - Brady filled in so well that
Belichick stayed with him even after
Bledsoe was ready to return.
Although Bledsoe was told he would
have a chance to win his job back,
Belichick soon decided he didn't have
the practice time to hold a comp.etition
and still prepare for the week's opponent. He gave the job to Brady, and
things couldn't have turned out better
for New England ever since.
The 24-year-old Brady was the AFC's
third-rated passer while leading the
Patriots to an 1 1-5 record in the regular
season. They were 5-11 last season and
started this season 0-2.
New England won six consecutive
games to win the division title and then
beat the Oakland Raiders 16-13 in a
snowy · overtime to earn a spot in the
· conference title game.
·
But when Brady sprained his left
ankle in the conference championship
last Sunday, Bledsoe came on in relief,
leading New England to a 24" 17 wip
over Pittsburgh and creating ~ quarterback controversy on the game's biggest
stage.
Belichick put off questions about who
would start, saying he would wait until
after Wednesday's practice to decide. He
even asked a pool reporter not to iden~
tify who took the most snaps in practice, apparently figuring that would be a
giveaway since the starter usually takes
most of the practice snaps with the
offense.

'
The Dally Senti~~·· Page B ·'f

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.·

NKA Crossword PuZllle
PHILLIP

57 with nine minutes to play.

No. 11 Gonzap 102, Pordand 67
Dan Dickau, bothered by the flu, and
Anthony Reason each scored 14 points
to lead the Bulldogs (19-3, 6-1 West
Coast Conference), who last lost at
home to Portland in 1990.
Casey Frandsen had 15 points for the
Pilots (5-16, 1-6).

South Carolina 80,
No. 16 Georgia 67
Jamel Bradley scored a season-high 22
points and became South Carolina's
career leader in 3-pointe" as the Gamecocks (13-7, 3-4 Southeastern Conference) won their fourth straight over
Georgia. Bradley's five 3-pointers gave
him 219 and moved him past BJ McKie,
who had 215 from 1996-99.
Jarvis Hayes had 21 points for the
ers.
Bulldogs (16-5, 5-3), who lost their secPrice scored six' of his 17 points in the ond straight on the road
final 5:38 and McGhee, who finished
with 10 points and 11 rebounds, had
Rutgers 61,
four big points and grabbed two key
No. 17 Connecticut 53
offensive rebounds down the stretch.
Jerome Coleman scored 26 points,
· "He played beyond his stars," Sampson
including 14 of Rutgers' last 17, and the
said of McGhee. "Hollis was a leader for Sc.arlet Knights (13-7, 4-4) beat Conus out on the floor. He looked like a necticut for the first time since joining
$rst-team All -American and did what
the Big East for the 1995-96 seasory.
leaders do."
Caron Butler had 20 points for the
In other games involving ranked teams
Huskies (14-4, 6-1), who had a six-game
·Wednesday, it was No. 7 Alabama 109,
winning streak snapped and were
Arkansas 94; No. 11 Gonzaga I 02, Port·outscored 14-2 in the final 3:44.
~and 67; South Carolina 80, No. 16
:Ceorgia 67; Rutgers 61, [\/o. 17 ConNebraska 80,
:necticut 53; Nebraska 80, No. 20 Texas
No. 20 Texas Tech 69
:fech 69; Notre Dame 89, No. 21 PittsCary Cochran scored 19 points for the
):&gt;urgh 76; and No. 24 Wake Forest 82,
Cornhuskers (10-9; 3-5 Big 12), who
North ·Carolina State 81.
played in front of a rare sellout crowd at
• Junior college transfer Cheyne Gadson
home.
·
had a career-high 14 points for the
Andre Emmett scored 17 points for
Cowboys, who dug themselves a big
Red Raiders (15-4, 4-3), who had
the
hole by making only three field goals
,a nd committing nine turnovers in the 20 turnovers and never recovered from a
first 15 minutes in falling behind 23-11. sluggish start in the second half in losing
"The first half we were really stag- their first game as a ranked team in five
nant," coach Eddie Sutton 1aid. "I was years. It was Texas Tech coach Bob
pleased with the way ·we competed in Knight's first trip to Lincoln.
the second half. When you get down on
Notre Dame 89,
the road like were down against a very,
No.
21 Pittsburgh 76
very good basketball team, you can fold
Chris Thomas and David Graves each
real easily."
Daryan Selvy made a baseline jumper, scored 19 points for the Irish (14-6, 4-3
Price made · a free throw and McGhee Big East), who shot 66.7 percent from
grabbed an offensive rebound and scored the field and swept the season series
from Pittsburgh for the second straight
to give Oklahoma a 53-49 lead.
Price hit a jumper in the lane that year.
Brandin Knight had 20 points and
made it 55-51. McGhee made two free
seven
assists for the visiting Panthe" (18throws for a 57-53 lead.
·
"The last few minutes of the game 4, 6-3), who entered the game allowing
were intense," McGhee said. " We knew an average of 57.3 points, second fe':"est
every sho't, every rebound, everything in the nation. The Irish had 49 points at
·was just crucial. I wanted to do whatev- halftime and led by 28.
er I could to help us win this game."
No. 24 Wake Forest 82,
N.C. State 81
No. 7 Alabama 109, Arkansas 94
Josh
Howard
matched his season-high
Freshman Earnest Shelton and Rod
Grizzard each had 21 points, and the with 21 points, including two clutch free
Crimson Tide (18-3, 6-1 Southeastern throws with 9.1 seconds left, for the visConference) won for the 30th tirne in iting Demon Deacons (15-6, 5-3), who
31. games at Coleman Coliseum, the are at their best midway mark in the
only Joss coming last season to Arkansas. Atlantic Coast Conference in five seaJannero Pargo was 7-of-14 from 3- sons.
Anthony Grundy scored 24 points for
point range and had 33 points for the
Razorbacks (11-9, 4-4), who trailed 92- the Wolfpack (16-5, 5-3), who had a
four- game winning streak snapped.

Brady

'

.

Before announcing his choice,
Belichick took one last look at a videotape to make sure Brady was moving
OK. When he was sure Brady's ankle
wasn 't a problem, he saw no reason to
make a change.
·
Bledsoe, meantime, could be traded or
.dangled iri the expansion draft with
hopes the Houston Texans take his $7.5
million 2002 salary out from under the
Patriots' cap. Or, the team could keep
both quarterbacks. It's possible because
Brady will cost only $370,833 next year.
"If I have a vote, I would not be
against both of them playing for us next
.h a
year\ unless someone comes Wit
blockbuster offer for either one," Kraft
said.
And what might that be?
"Oh, I don't know, ask the coach," he
said.
Asked how he would feel if he were
told in the offseason that Brady would
be the quarterback next year, Bledsoe
said, "The future's the future and, tight
now we're
focused on this game, this
.
week, and whatever happens ·after that
happens. Right no'l\', we're not going to
even address that."
Bledsoe, who will turn 30 on Feb. 14,
doesn't want to remain a backup after
being the Patriots' signature player. for
rriost of his career..Chicago, Seattle and
Washington all are possible destinations
, - good teams that could use a better
quarterback.
The youngest quarterback in NFL
history to throw for 10,000 yards, Bledsoe led New England to the 1997 Super
Bowl and earned three Pro Bowl
appearances while setting nearly every
Patriots' passing record.
"He's never done anything that hasn't
·
(
reflected
well on the team," owner
Robert Kraft said. "He's the prototype
of the kind of player anyone would want
on their teant."

.

ALDER

Hill's Self

Shade River AG Service

Storage

•Ahead In Service•

28670 Buhan Road

Reel,., Ohio
45771

7-·2217

H11uri
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
1114'1 mo. pd

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

97 BeediSt
middleport, OH
(11'118' 610'1120')

992-3194
992-6635
DEPOYIIG
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts

Roonng, Decks

Factory Authorized

Drywall, and

740-667-0363

¥

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• FOOicn, Walls, S"PI •

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• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
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(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

(740) 949-1521

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Sorry tor your lnronv.
985,3616 ChriJ

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•Complete

Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

74()..992-1671

THE BORN LOSER

7/WTFN

0CFOKE YOO ~C&gt; WtTf\
YCXJI{ ~N... r. .:rrKK ON~ .. ;

.JJ!X:&gt;I KG BY YCXJI':. :&gt;TOMN:.~

I'D ~y YOu'~ Tf.\E: B(&lt;:U..D

I

('II\ \HE

Ef&gt;...\E:~, TOO I

~­

/~.JWtN~·

/

Pd. I Mo.

Financing &amp; 90 Days
Same As Cash Available

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp . Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264
M~dicare Supplemenl; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retiremenl,
Pension &amp; 401K Rol1overs;
Mortgage; Major Medical ·
• Nursing Home

WICK18 .
HAULING and
EXCAVATING
•Hiullng ot.lmeatone

oGravel • Sind •Topaoll
oflll Dirt oMulch

~.
(740) 992·3470

We stock all major brands
Mike Hill

II

_ ·

740·9 • 7

Sunset Home
Cons,truction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More

FREE ESTIMATES! .

740-742-3411

Steve's Truck
Accessories
Steve ft. White, Owner
BedUners • Nerf Bar
• Tonneue Cover
Ventvisor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line
or Other Attessories
31345 Noble SuiMIII Rd.

Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992·5822

~eJf.~t()r~e

ac....:

311
38

=:

rtor.Slclelm.

org. 12 of
Fllrce
niCkwor-

' ·AllY IIIZE BIJII.U111/IHI-

'229.00*
•
•
•
•

FREE INSTALLATION
FREE IN HOME ESTIMATE
FULLYWELDI!D
50 YEAR WARRANTY .

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

. 992-4119

1-800-291-5600

Vlllt Our Showroom On State Route 33
6 Mlle1 North Of PonMroy, Ohio,. At C!DIInCy ROIUill
• No Dealen or Contrado~ Pluae
V11al Ma1tere.rd
wv 01013477

I

47 IIIMtnl'a ·
IIIIII'Umenl
.41 llumpoWr

48=

50 Doubll
CUMI

Hlri-

51 Shtlver of

~

52 lt'a--

30Colfoe

tennlo

~-~'

tI I

I I

8

I

•;

GET ANSWER

turns a spade, win in

JANUARY 31

I

FriJ11y, FeL. 0 I. 20112
Hard wnrk and diligcnn·
will p;,y h;mdsomc rcw;mh fur
y(1ll in rhc year ahead . Ho\\1·
~n· r ,

you

m&gt;~r h:tVl' lfl

prop l'r encouragt•mcnt ;md
s/he will come
thruugh tOr you .
.
TAURUS (Ap ril 211-M;•y
20) -- T C)da y }'tlU •rc li kt:l y t"
p cT~i~ll'tH:y ,

he a hit

about tht• ro1tc of ~l'Ct J
tlw rl'Wrm r.:o me in . They

be. l'Xtremcly in~luwiou .~ and
productivt.•, :md ch.mccs are
you'll accompli .d1 a lot. How-.
ever, if )'()ll take on roo
' much, \lou c.:otdd start to
-make mi~t.ikes.
GEMINI (May 21 ·J•m• 211)
--.You're a mciablc ~lcuon
who li~cs pecplt. both friend'

L"ou kl ~ t;.n mtt ~row.

AQUARIUS

U'"· 211-l'cb.

I 9) -- It'~ true ym1 get ;~ l ou~
wit h p..·opk from al! walk~ u f
lifl• J lnl tmla y ynu rould
out sm.:h type.~ to ~pc1 HI

H'ill'dl

rhc day. One-

w~,nl

of

\\'i\1'11 ..

in.,;: St-.y nway froq1 l'h·batable . ·
~ubjccr~. like I'Oiilic~ . ·G,•t ajump nn lili• Uy lllld('nt.mdin~
the inlluC'nce~ t\Jilt' IJ ~n\lcrn
yo11 in thl' yr.u :\11l':'ld. Sl·nd
fur yum A~tru-Ctra~lh prc:dic-

ami' nrant~:crs, :JtHI rhcy, iu
lmn. like y~m . Um be can·rul
Ulday tlur vou don't befri~·nd
~umcone who. i• UllJiiVnry.
CANCE R (Juno 21-July
22) -- The ambition yon distoday aJni hnw )l-Oll ~o
ab"ntt - ~triving t"l'f yotu ninu
:trt' admiro1blu:' The. problem ~~

.' p~1y

Nl'W VuJ·k, NY
!Ol~h. U.~ mro to 'slatl.' )'o'ur"

ydu cd'uiJ h~w il tl:'micncy to
turn bilck j11~~ whc.·n yC)ur ftll;J )

Zodiac Mign.

Cellular

PISCES (fch. 20-March 21J)
-- l,rovided your l e.lUU it:tt~:
t:an offt'r cit'11cr finan cial or
musdc ~upp~1rt to "'JUill YUllr ~

Jeff''Warner Ins.

input, you t; JiJ be v,cry un:- .
l't~~ful h:..min)l "P with ~t..um·­

nnc tud,Jy . If nul, thi 11p;~
wmi't wmk m\1,
ARIES (Mu,·ch 21· April 1'1)
·- Sollh.'U1ll' un w lwtH ~·m1 .

:m• dt&gt;pt.'llllin~ 111:J}',,nt:l'd .1 IH-

is in ~iMht .

•

.

.

.

•

Primer- Notch - Vital- Bygone · CELERY
"What makes people do certain things like laugh or
cry," said the old. gent, "is hard to define It defies description, JUst like the taste of CELERY.""

tie jump~t.trt wJ.t}'· With the

p~ti~.·nr

I I I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

.the dummy, and play
a heart yourself. You
will collect an overtrick via ·two spades,
two hearts, one dia mond and five clubs.

Station,

TFN

copier
41 lnopecto .

I 1 I' I I

I

PEANUTS

riom by m.dlintc $2 to A~tro­
(:r:tph. c/o thi~ n~.w ~r.,p,cr.
1'.0. U&lt;&gt;s 17;H, M1orr;y .Hill

992-5479

43~h

.~
11
32 Moon,
didn't have a tombINASAOK)
40 Poet llttoro · cry
POOiically 53 tablet
stone for 26 years. I
42 ,.. black 18 Civemln
34 "-c:Nned
14 Kino!
44 IIMkon
Alley37 Softdrtnlle
wonder how Auden
uncovered this piece
of trivi~.
Over the last three
days, we learned that
normally you, as de darer, should win in
• hand with the top of
equal honors . The
primary exception occurs wh en you have
1he ace and king in a
no-trump contract;
then ·you should win
wilh the king. However, you must always
take all of your 26
car.ds into account.
How would you plan
the play in this threeno-trump contract after West leads his
CELEBR.ITY CIPHER
fourth- highest heart?
by Luis Campoa
Celel&gt;nly Cipher Clyplogramo ore C~Uiod lrom quollllona by 1atnooo
As South, you dis- .
people, poland p.-1. Eoch - I n lhe cipher alanda for anolher.
like responding one
Today'• clue: P equ.ts U
·
no - trump, but such is
·life at the bridge table .
'T
DIJRTNOH' ON
SHOVDZTJL, :
You are not strong
enough for a twoSH 0 V D Z 0 H R
N I .J ' F,
VP F
club response.
GVUO
V
BIF
VJN
FZOX
You have only four
top tricks: two spades,
ZYMO
Fl
AIHU
ZVHN.'one heart and one
diamond . A second
ATBBTO
JOBRIJ
heart trick is coming
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'To live Ia to climb ·the Andes: the
your way,' but you
more one cllmba, the steeper becoma the preclplcea.• - ·
Eugenio Marfa de HOIIot
·
would like to benefit
from ~h~t lovely du~
suit. However, only a
WOlD
GAM I
very friendly oppo.
ldltod ~y CLAY I. ,OILAN
nent will win the first
Rearrange lettan of the
rotmd of clubs with
four scrambled words . be·
his ace. And if the
low to form four simple warda .
club ace is held up
until the second
LUSNOD
round, you will nec&lt;P
1
a hand entry to get to
the four established
club winners. Where
is that entry? Only in
hearts . So, you must
. win the first trick
with dummy's heart
A P D I L
"Overthelastseveralyearsouf
5 1.
..
economy has gotten very weird."
ace; do not run the
.I 1
.
.
one fellow sa1d . "My bank, has
lc~d around to your .
.---------.,fa1led long before my new-··-··
hand.
T I K E T N
,. has"
Continu~ by driv&amp; 17
Q Complete: the chuckle quoted
ing our the club ace.
_
.
.
.
.
by fdl•ng in tl1e m•nmg words
Here, West will
·-l....-..I-....1-.1.--1-.....J vov delr'elop hom step No. 3 below.
probably shift io a
PRINT NIJMBERED LETTERS I
diamond. Finesse the
IN THESE SQUARES
10 or queen . And if,
€) UNSCRAMBLE lETTE RS TO
after winning, East re-

VINYL REPLACEMENTWINDDWI

740-992-5232

.

f:ut

1-"aa

-PRICING

33795 Hi£md Rd.
· Ponur9J, Ohio

·Advertise,
business
.on P.age
for one month .for as
low as 525
Phone 992·21 55

a+

0

~;:~ FACTORY DIRECT

High&amp; Dry

3 NT · All pull

41 llfiU

'::~:t:~v S@R~lA-~£tfJS®

lose 2-Bibs.

Advertise
In this
space for
$SOper
month.

Nertlt.

PIU

38 Some,

I li Ic t Rl' I

740-992-7036
Pd. 1
. 11

'

; '.

HERBRLIFE
IDDEPEDDEDT
DISTRIBUTOR

every week

104 Fifth Street, Racine, Ohio

Owner

f\OU~!

NOT+IING. PE~. 11AH,
8Ul' I REALLY DON'T
WAIIT TO BE PLAYINt:.
YOU. I 'tl MUCH
RATHER 8E PL1WING.
YOUR. NUMBER ONE GUY.

If your weight Is
unbecoming to
you, You sbould be
· COming to us.
• Good selection or new &amp; used tires •
•Oil change $18.95· . e;. . .• .. . .·

\

~~If\\!&gt;

'

1· 16

(740) 949-1521

Wn\

I NT

4. E _ ,
5 818ge

.......

.. ,_u~fi'P

• New H11mes
· •Garages

• fop • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

hul•

1 Klnlle'oong
2 T..t
3 c.t•o PNY
20

21 Sollcn.d
22 Den
heeding
. .,.. 'I
dweller
2e Rlllt
6 B111blll'1 23 "-1-1"
(2-.)
w....
31
7 c-non~eo 24 ~!Yc~.
driver
I b1rwne
25 -out
l~t
-~lyget
33 Clllmlcal
8 Plrlo compound 10 Knlght'o
27~10
34 - y lddiHI
311 Devoured 11 - L.lppard 2tAClNII

Poe..• that Poe 's grave

IJII.t (!!.,..viJ"*'
~
I

.....

~

DOWN

18 = k
23 O.rdln 1o01
28 Grut L.llleo
28 Copt'l

W .H. Audcn men tions in his book
abo ut Edgar Allan

Middleport, Oh 45760
Tonia Reibsr
Licensed Masssge
Therapisl

::.;·) ..

17R._

Whole deal

213 N. Second Ave.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

JONES'

'

"~
nonl

J I

Openlnllltld: ¥ 6

750 Easl Stale Slreet Phone (740)593-667
Athens, Ohio
·

(740) 992-0739

q

Dfaler: Non h

•

Owner: Terry tamm

KJ I I

• 'J 2

Vulnerable: Both

(740) 992-1705

Wolfe Home
maintenance

t

•

6KJ10111 5

mfiGS mfiSSftGf
THfRIIPY

Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates:
Insured

~==

51

.....
llladlil
. . . . 17._
Cllrtie
M Put ....,
11 ~COlor
effGit
11 1'1111
11
14

6Q10t4

.
¥

WVM031712

HOUSE ·
PH lUTinG

....

• 7I I

Ser¥ing Ollio and W. V.

BISSEll

Q'

lklutla

Crele
Free Estimates

Additions

in this
space
for
$50 per
month

•

• J IS
¥ KU?I2

Flal Work,

Remodeling,

Adv~rtise

+A.QitU

,....

CONCiflf/IL~

Specializing In;

WEST SHADE
BARBER SHOP
Clos&amp;l Jan.' 30, Jls~
Feb. lsi
Open
The, Frl 10·5:00 p.m.
SaL 8:30 · 12:00
George K. Vac.
Feb. l·Man:h I

· q

.

a..ntle

11 llllil
11-tlrlnk

A A K J
A I I

740 185-31141

L\1\11\I'S

PUtS

I 000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

c..........

12% Swtlt Horu fMd ................ $4.40/50
'\ ;l ja (IIIII!WifWctog fooci.. .......SUS/50
Economy Beef 12% IIOCk feed ..... $6,75150
l~....flbQ-1 .................... $4.751100
1f!niyer Crumbel• ..................... $6.951

( 0\S II&lt; I ( IH l \

Case·IH Parts
Dealers

Raoint, Ohio 45771

Equlne12 ·
12% SWIIt Horu fwd ................ $$.00/50

Pemerog Eagles
111100 2171
fuerJ Thursday
li SUnd.ly
IIIOI's Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Progressive top Une
Thursdays
PrDQresstve
Coverall on SUndays

1

41 llitw.d
.....
. MIV

l=ldn · M~

c01111AaOIS. lilt

35537 St. R1. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 4S720

s-tlhutr

ACROSS

P/1

·LEO (July 23-Au~. 22) -C1lreful rl:mni n ~ dc1m• with a
~ ~I'OI1K t.lO,\C of L'Otlsidcr:atiml
for tho~ involVed f5 a mu~t .

cmlny. I( Y'i"

II')'·

co Ui' wil h-

mll a fliMIH rl:m, yo11 could
lmc your way :mJ nm out of
~:u .

VlltGO (Au~ . 2.1-S"'"· 22)
-- 1'hme with who111 yuu'Jl

.

�••

AEP addresses Gavin 'plume,' A2
··-"'-

.,

I'

••

Melp County's

What's

Hometown News,.,.,

Commission retums funds to vso
BY BRIAN J. REID

"For our veterans, we have no problem adding

BREEDOMYIMILYSEHTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Ron Eastman and
Mick Williams 'of the MeiSi Couocy
Veterans Service · Commission m(t
with the county commissioners on
Thursday. to discuss the commissioners' 5 percent c~t in the Veterans Commission's 2002 budget.
The VSO submitted' a budget req1,1est
of $119,139, and the commissioners
appropriated. $1 11,200.
· The Ohio ReVised Code mandates
that the county' general fund use up to
a half-mill of the county's inside millage
to piovide vetetaru services funding. .
In making their 2002 appropriations, commi~ioners cut all general
fund departments by 5 percent to
make up for projected shortfall in

. lCIOO~

MOIIIJMIEBl

144230, leather, moonroof,
!!_l~r

StWf 1HOOSANI&gt;S!
Meigs humbles N-V. B1

Jean Smeltzer, 58 .
William Taylor Sr., 59
Details, A3

a

'

I

the additional funding
revenue.
The board agreed to replace the
$8,000 ·cut from the veterans commission budget, and explained that equal
cuts were made in all departments.
The VSO's request for 2002 · was
$2,700 below the half-mill cap.
Last year, the VSO returned $1,600 to
the general fund, representing supplies
line items ·and other unspent money.
"We run a tight budget, ·and we
think efficient budget," Williams said.
"We think we submitted a fair budget,
and would like to see it approved."
Conunissioner Mick Davenport, who

if it's needed. "

presided at Thursday's meeting in the
absence of President JeffThornton, said
the funds will be replaced if needed.
,'.'fo,r our veterans, we have no problem adding the additional funding if
it's needed," Davenport said.
The Veterans Services Commission
provides transportation services to veterans and other services, iQduding
grave markers and Memorial Day
remembrances .
Commissioners opened bids for new
"Jaws of Life" equipment for the Rutland Volunteer Fire Department. Bids
were received from Howell Rescue

'

CLEANING UP POMEROY

RACINE

Village Council
raises water rates

Weather
HIP: JOa, Low: 20.
· Details, A2

I

.

. $17,950

ft021Z

$2.1,832.

zu

#CM96

$11,988
·~
LINCOLN

2802 TA1J8118 8E8

AMERICAN

LUXURY

,n.s

#C022S

$17,661

$11

RACINE - An increase
in village water rates was
approved during the recent
meeting of the Racine Village CounciL
Council approved an ordinance that will raise the village's current water rates.
The new rates are as follows:
Resident, $14.50 per month
for first 4,000 gallons plus
$.35 per hundred over 4,000
gallons; non•resiqen_~S 16.90
per month for .first 4,000
gallons plus $.35 per hundred over 4,000 gallons; light
commercial, $14.50 per
month for first 4,000 gallons
plus $.25 per hundred over

II··

:

·Lotteries

Protection on

all .llew and Uled

()HID
Pick :S: 2-9-7
Pick 4: 3-9-5·9
Buckeye 5: 3-6-19·25-30
Pick dey: 4-4-5
Pick 4 dey: 8-4-1·9 .
•

vehlclee.•

:s

O•lly :S: 4-9-5
Dilly 4: 9-o-8-5
.cash
4-7-11-16-21•22

Check and adjuot camber an&lt; toe. Add~onal poru and
tabor rnav be required on aome vehicles.

:zs:

----~------------------95 M4TOliiCU"

·Index ·

PMTWBI

• Service lncluciU· up to 5 quarta of Molot'cratt o!l and new
Motorcran oil filter • PortDtm Multi-Point Vehicle Inspection
• Lube • Check and til nacaaaary fluids • Allin 29 minutes
or lass • Diesel vehloltie
be extra.

. 2 Sedllftl - 12 ,....

BED RAILS -

$242

Starting
at

Calendar
·classifieds
:comics
!:lear Abby
Editorials .
Movies
Obituaries

:Sports

Weather

AS
82-4

85
AS .
A4
A3
A3
81
A2

; . C 2002 Ohio Valley Publlshi"' Co.

BURNT
- Several ~relict and burned-out structures, like this one on West Main
Street, are sc~1~dtJied to be demolished next week as part of a clean-up campaign Implemented by the VII
of Pomeroy. (Tony M. Leach)

.

.

'

''

.•

,

oe oli'Qon project
to rt ' ext week
·Mayor .~ays .
'eyeso'ref will be
torn 4own ·
BY TONY M.

Mulllerry

avenues,

Main summer. However, a constant

·st~ ' , Mechanic Street, and barrage of thunderstorms and

WCH .

TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
.
I

POMEROY&gt;-'- Eradication
efforts on a n~mber of rundown buildings throughout
the village is sef tb begin next
I
week.
Mayor John : Blaettnar said
crews will star,t tearing down
several abandyned structures
located on Butternut and .

TJ)lfi( and Fourth streets next
weelfas part of clean-up campaign implemented by the
village.
"We have recently leased a
trackhoe and will begin razing these eyesores on Monday
or '11 sday," said Blaetmar.
·"The buildings are .a safety
hazard and have been detracting· ftf&gt;m Pomeroy's better
qualitif:s for sometime now::
ViU~ge oflidals had intended on removing the dilapidated or burnt-out structures last

!

J.

REED

accumulating precipitation
halted the project's progress.
"We are currently working
. with the ·county to remove
remnants of the old Masonic
Temple Building, as well as a
burnt-out apartment building
that sits adjacent to the tempie, in order to make room for
the new courthouse's parking
lot," said Blaettnar.
·"Once that has been completed, we will concentrate on
removing the remaining rundown structures," he added.

Pebruary 3, 2002

I

HOLZER

· CLINic · .

.. . .
',

AIV~ti"AI

~

~

Holzer Medical Center
and Holzer Clinic give

"Baby Love"

PREMIER

• •

•

a wholt:t new meaning.
}

\
1

I

PluH ... hdne,AJ

senting the northwest tip of ·
the Appalachian region.
ATHENS -The number
Now, more than 66 perof graduates from the Ohio cent of the OU-COM
University
College
of alurrtni practicing in the
Osteopathic Medicine who . southeastern Ohio region
remain in southeastern Ohio are practicing in one of the
to practice medicine has primary care disciplines. ·
nearly doubled in the past
The American Medical
six years, and is expected to' Student Association, last
continue to increase.
year, ranked the Athens colA new study of OUlege as the
COM
number
alumni
one osteoshows that
path ic ·
one OUmedical
COM
sc hool in
of
graduate
terms
practices in
the
per• Meigs
centage of
County,
graduates
and four in
going into
Gallia Cou nty, and that 98 family practical residencies.
have chosen to practice in a
Among aU 142 D.O. and
23-county area surrounding M.D. medical sc hools, OU- ·
Athens.
COM had the second-highThe .Ohio General Assem- est percentage of graduates
bly established the college in in postgraduate training in
1975, with a mandate to both family medicine and
produce doctors who would pnmary care.
provide medical ca re_ for
The 2001 OU-COM
underserved areas of Ohio.
Alumni Study found 41 perAt that "time, no area of cent of the college's graduOhio was more underserved
than the 23 counties reprePle•n ... Docs,AJ
BY BRIAN

BREEOOMYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

CoMIIIg .Super Bowl Sunday

LINCOLN

4,000 gallons; heavy com.merdal, $24 per month for
first 4,000 plus S2.30' per
1,000 over 4,000 gallons.
The rate increase will go
into effect with the March
billing.
Voting against the rate
increase was Councilman
Henry Bentz Jr.
In other matters, council
approved the first reading of
an ordinance requested by
the EPA requiring a CrossConnection ControL There
is already a tequirement in
the water service ordinance·
for a back flow preventer,
however, the EPA is requirin,g a separate ordinance.

OU-COM docs staying
in Appalachian Ohio

W.VA.

2·wheel$2495 4-wheel $4995

$19

BY ToNY M. WCH
TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

lxtendecl service

WttoHer
Ford Motor
Company's
....p ..

WASHINGTON (AP)
- Americans cut back on
their spending a bit in
December as free-financing
· offers for cars and other
incentives began to wane.
The Commerce Department reported Thursday
that consumer . •,spending
drtipj:jed ·by
December. That
a
revised 0.3 percent decline
in November, a much
smaller decrease than p~evi­
ously reported. ·
. At the same time, Americans'
incomes,
which
include wages, interest and
government benefits, rose
by a solid 0.4 percent in
December.
On Wall street, stocks
surged higher for the second straight day on the
Federal Reserve's positive
outlook for the economy.
The Dow Jones industrial
average dosed up I 57.14
points at 9,920.00.

o:z

......,.

#COI63

I -·
I I

Spending dips~
lncomes up

GDND M~U~Qms

4X4, A/C, Cassette, #C024 7

.

Systems of Kettering, in the amount of
$26,457.50, and Advanced Rescue
Systems Inc., Mayfield Heighrs, in the
amount of$27,500.
The equipment will be financed
through the Community Development Block Grant Formula program.
The commissioners also:
• Approved a bid for bituminous
materials for February from Asphalt
Materials Inc., Marietta;
• Approved payment of bills in the
amount of $295,698.83;
• Approved an appropriation of
444,843 for the county engineer;
• Approved resolutions authorizing
the county to apply for $300,000 in
CDBG Community Distress program.
Also present were Commissioner
Jim Sheets and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

'

..,;

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